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Mont Blanc (BrE: / ˌ m ɒ̃ ˈ b l ɒ̃ (k)/; AmE: / ˌ m ɒ n (t) ˈ b l ɑː ŋ k /) [a] is the highest mountain in the Alps and Western Europe, and the highest mountain in Europe outside the Caucasus Mountains, rising 4,805.59 m (15,766 ft) [1] above sea level, located on the Franco-Italian border. [3]
Height (feet) Mont Blanc: 4,808.73 [21] [22] 15,776.7 Mont Blanc de Courmayeur: 4,748 ... high up on Mont Blanc, during an expedition organised by Joseph Hamel ...
Mountain Metres Feet Range Location and Notes ... Mont Blanc massif, ... High Tatras, Slovakia Mount Michelson: 2,652: 8,701:
Mont Dolent: 3,820 12,530 330 1,080 Mont Blanc massif: I/B-07.V-C Aosta Valley: 1864 Aiguille des Glaciers: 3,816 12,520 301 988 Mont Blanc massif: I/B-07.V-A Aosta Valley: 1878 Aiguille Noire de Peuterey
Mont Blanc/ HP Hight Tatras and Slovakia: Mount Olympos (Mytikas) [4] Greece: 2,917 2,353: 564 Großglockner 1 / Mont Blanc 2 / HP Greece: Mount Taranaki New Zealand: 2,518 2,308: 210 Mount Ruapehu, North Island, New Zealand: Mount Kosciuszko Australia: 2,228 2,228: 0 none/ HP mainland Australia: Monte Rosa Italy Switzerland: 4,634 2,165: 2,469 ...
This is a list of the highest mountains of Switzerland.This list only includes summits above 3,600 metres (11,811 ft) with a topographic prominence of at least 30 metres. . Note that this list includes many secondary summits that are typically not considered mountains (in the strict sense of the term) but that are mainly of climbing intere
1 Mont Blanc, 2 Piz Bernina, 3 Barre des Écrins, 4 Dufourspitze, 5 Finsteraarhorn, 6 Gran Paradiso, 7 Grand Combin, 8 Dom, 9 Matterhorn, 10 Aletschhorn, 11 Weisshorn, 12 Weissmies This list tabulates all of the 82 official mountain summits of 4,000 metres (13,123 ft) or more in height in the Alps , as defined by the International Climbing and ...
For example, the encirclement parent of Mont Blanc, the highest peak in the Alps, is Mount Everest. Mont Blanc's key col is a piece of low ground near Lake Onega in northwestern Russia (at 113 m (371 ft) elevation), on the divide between lands draining into the Baltic and Caspian Seas. This is the meeting place of two 113 m (371 ft) contours ...