Nock Mountains
Nock Mountains | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Peak | Eisenhut |
Elevation | 2,441 m above sea level (AA) |
Dimensions | |
Length | 10 km (6.2 mi) |
Geography | |
State | Salzburg, Styria |
Range coordinates | 46°54′14″N 13°43′40″E / 46.90389°N 13.72778°E |
Parent range | Gurktal Alps |
The Nock Mountains.
In July 2012 the Nock Mountains and the adjacent Lungau region were designated a biosphere reserve by UNESCO. They were largely unglaciated in the Ice Age and were a glacial refugium.
Geography
As westernmost part of the Gurktal Alps, the Nock Mountains are separated from the
The Nock Mountains may be divided into eight subgroups. South of Bad Kleinkirchheim are the stocks of the Mirnock massif (2,110 m (AA)) with a significant topographic prominence of 1,343 m, the Wöllaner Nock (2,145 m (AA)) and the Gerlitzen (1,909 m (AA)) high above Lake Ossiach. The central region of the Nock Mountains is formed by the Millstätter Alpe (2,101 m (AA)) and the Rosennock (2,440 m (AA)), the highest summit in Carinthia. In the north are the stocks of the Schwarzwand (2,241 m (AA)), the Königstuhl (2,406 m (AA)) in Salzburg, which is also a tripoint, and the Eisenhut (2,441 m (AA)).
The range has also been referred to in German language tourist brochures as the "Nocky Mountains", an allusion to the Rocky Mountains.[4]
National park
The central area formed Nock Mountains National Park (German: Nationalpark Nockberge), established by the Carinthian state government on 1 January 1987. The remote area had already been developed with the construction of the scenic Nockalm Road from 1979. Further plans for a skiing region were averted by a citizens' initiative and a referendum in 1980, whereby 94% of the voters declared themselves against the project.
Despite its name, Nock Mountains National Park was designated a protected landscape (Category V) according to IUCN protected area categories. The territory of 184 square kilometres (71 sq mi) was entirely located within the Carinthian part of the range, along the border with Salzburg and Styria, stretching from Krems and the Lieser Valley in the west to Reichenau in the east, and down to Bad Kleinkirchheim and Radenthein in the south.
References
- ISBN 978-3-7001-2775-8.
- ^ Borntraeger, Gebrüder (1987). Monograph Series on Mineral Deposits, Issues 27-28, p. 220.
- ^ Bedeker, K. (1970). Austria, Baedekers Autoführer-Verlag, p 140.
- ^ For example: www.merian.de, www.nockalmstrasse.at Archived 2016-04-06 at the Wayback Machine, www.speick.de[permanent dead link], www.bz-berlin.de, www.wienerzeitung.at