Monte_Pelmo

Monte Pelmo

Monte Pelmo

Mountain in Italy


Monte Pelmo is a mountain of the Dolomites, in the province of Belluno, Northeastern Italy.

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The mountain resembles a giant block which stands isolated from other peaks, so can be seen clearly from the neighbouring valleys and from nearby mountains such as Antelao and Monte Civetta.

Monte Pelmo was one of the first major Dolomite peaks to be climbed, by Englishman John Ball, who later became president of the UK's Alpine Club, in 1857.[clarification needed] He set out with a chamois hunter from the Boitevalley towards Monte Pelmo. Over the long ledge named after Ball, which the chamois hunters refused to cross, Ball got into the large cirque, through which he climbed over the small Pelmo glacier to below the summit structure.

West of the summit lies a secondary peak, Pelmetto (meaning "Little Pelmo" in Italian), at 2,990m high, which has a 1,100-metre (3,609 ft) high north face.[2]

So there are only a few possibilities for climbing. The best known (and easiest) ascent leads over the south-east flank. The route of the first climbers still offers a rewarding but long and strenuous mountain tour in the second degree of difficulty. Problems can be found with the above-mentioned, exposed ball band. Climbing skills and surefootedness are necessary. The ascent of Monte Pelmo should also be carried out in safe weather and without snow.

On some rocks on its western side people can admire dinosaurs prints (Sign "Orme di Dinosauri"). These are the traces of at least three dinosaurs that are approx. 220 million years old. From the path to the tracks you walk steeply uphill for about half an hour.[3][4]

This mountain is surnamed "God's armchair" because its shape looks like a huge armchair.[5]

See also


References

  1. "Monte Pelmo, Italy". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 13 January 2015.
  2. "Monte Pelmo". summitpost.org. Retrieved 13 January 2015.
  3. "Dolomites: Monte Pelmo - dinosaur footprints on the landslide rock of Pelmetto". magicoveneto.it (in Italian). Retrieved 23 February 2021.
  4. "Borca di Cadore". dolomiti.org (in Italian). Retrieved 23 February 2021.



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