Stellach wall
Stellach wall | ||
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Front and rear Kendlspitze as well as Stellachturm and Stellachwand (from left to right) seen from Debantgrat |
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height | 3060 m above sea level A. | |
location | East Tyrol , Austria | |
Mountains | Garnet group | |
Coordinates | 47 ° 2 '45 " N , 12 ° 35' 43" E | |
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First ascent | R. Gerin, G. Hecht (1927) | |
Normal way | from the Sudetendeutschen Hütte in the direction of Dürrenfeld and over the Graue Scharte and the south ridge ( I ) |
The Stellachwand is a 3060 m above sea level. A. high mountain peaks of the Granatspitz group in East Tyrol . The mountain summit was first climbed on July 14, 1927 by R. Gerin and G. Hecht over the southwest flank and the north ridge.
location
The Stellachwand is located in the extreme south of the Granatspitz Group in the core zone of the Hohe Tauern National Park in the north of the municipality of Matrei in East Tyrol or the Lienz district. It is located between the Stel Lach Tower ( 3038 m above sea level. A. ) in the south and the Gradötz ( 3063 m above sea level. A. ) in the north, where between Stel Lach wall and Gradötz the Stel Salmon Charter ( 2994 m above sea level. A. ) and between Stel Lach wall and Stel Lach Tower the Graue Scharte ( 2971 m above sea level ) lies. In the south-west is the Hochleitenscharte or Karlanscharte ( 2678 m above sea level ), which marks the transition to Gaminitz. The Stellachturm is a secondary peak on the north ridge of the Hinteren Kendlspitze ( 3080 m above sea level ). The Stellachkees used to stretch to the west of the Stellachwand, while the Kendlkar is located to the southeast. The closest valley is the Kalser Dorfertal to the east, to the west is the headwaters of the Steinerbach .
Promotion opportunities
The Stellachwand is an insignificant alpine summit, which is only recorded in a few maps. The normal route to the Stellachwand starts at the Sudetendeutschen Hütte and initially leads in the direction of the Dürrenfeld. Before reaching the Dürrenfeldscharte, the ascent branches off without a path into the western cirque and then over a steep rubble and craggy gully into the Graue Scharte. Then the path leads over easy rock steps to the summit ( I ). The first to climb chose the north-south crossing, which led them from the Stellachscharte to the summit and on the descent into the Graue Scharte ( II ). An ascent from the Hochleitenscharte ( II ) is also possible.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Alpine Club Card
literature
- Willi End : Alpine Club Leader Glockner Group and Granatspitz Group. Bergverlag Rudolf Rother: Munich 2011, ISBN 978-3-7633-1266-5 .
- Georg Zlöbl: The three thousand meter peaks of East Tyrol in the Hohe Tauern National Park . Verlag Grafik Zloebl, Lienz-Tristach 2007, ISBN 3-200-00428-2 .
- Alpine Club Map 1: 25,000, sheet 39, Garnet Point Group , ISBN 978-3-928777-75-9 .