Again head

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Again head
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.

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 .

height 2166  m above sea level NHN
location Bavaria , Germany
Mountains Allgäu Alps
Coordinates 47 ° 24 ′ 0 ″  N , 10 ° 25 ′ 0 ″  E Coordinates: 47 ° 24 ′ 0 ″  N , 10 ° 25 ′ 0 ″  E
Wiedemer Kopf (Bavaria)
Again head
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