Again head
Again head | ||
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Wiedemer's head (in the foreground of the left half of the picture) from the northeast, with a clearly recognizable fold in the rock. Further peaks (from left to right): relatively far in the background the four-peaked Höfats and in the middle of the picture the Schneck with its east wall and the three peaks of the Rotkopf . |
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height | 2166 m above sea level NHN | |
location | Bavaria , Germany | |
Mountains | Allgäu Alps | |
Coordinates | 47 ° 24 ′ 0 ″ N , 10 ° 25 ′ 0 ″ E | |
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rock | dolomite | |
Age of the rock | Upper Triassic ( norium , main dolomite ) | |
First ascent | Rädler, 1886 |
The Wiedemer Kopf is a 2166 m high mountain in the Allgäu Alps , about 10 east-south-east of Oberstdorf . It forms the end of an approx. 750 m long ridge that extends from the Kreuzkopf to the north-northwest.
The clearly visible fold structures in the rock of the mountain are striking . This rock is layered dolomite of the Upper Triassic ( Nor ).
The Prinz-Luitpold-Haus is located at the northeast foot of the Wiedemer Kopf . The Höhenweg from Edmund-Probst-Haus to Prinz-Luitpold-Haus bypasses the Wiedemer Kopf on the west and north sides. A partially secured path leads up the mountain, which requires surefootedness. There are some difficult climbing routes on the north and west walls .
literature
- Thaddäus Steiner : Allgäuer Bergnames , Lindenberg, Kunstverlag Josef Fink, 2007, ISBN 978-3-89870-389-5
- Zettler / Groth: Alpine Club Guide Allgäu Alps . Bergverlag Rudolf Rother , Munich 1984. ISBN 3-7633-1111-4