Lenzspitze
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Lenzspitze | |
---|---|
Highest point | |
Elevation | 4,293 m (14,085 ft) |
Prominence | 86 m ↓ Nadeljoch[1] |
Parent peak | Nadelhorn |
Isolation | 0.61 km → Nadelhorn[1] |
Coordinates | 46°06′16.7″N 7°52′06.4″E / 46.104639°N 7.868444°E |
Geography | |
Location | Switzerland |
Parent range | Pennine Alps |
Climbing | |
First ascent | August 1870 by Clinton Thomas Dent, Alexander Burgener and Franz Burgener |
Easiest route | South-west ridge (west flank) Mixed at PD |
The Lenzspitze is a 4,293-metre (14,085 ft) mountain in the Pennine Alps in Switzerland. It is the southernmost peak on the Nadelgrat, a high-level ridge running roughly north–south, north of Dom in the Mischabel range, above the resort of Saas Fee to the east, and the Mattertal to the west.[2]
Ascent
[edit]It was first climbed in August 1870 by Clinton Thomas Dent with guide Alexander Burgener and a porter, Franz Burgener, by the north-east face to the Nadeljoch and then the north-west ridge to the summit. This route is rarely used today.
The east-north-east ridge starts at the Mischabel Hut. This ridge was first climbed on 3 August 1882 by William Woodman Goodman with guides Ambros Supersaxo and Theodor Andenmatten.
Its north-east face is a classic ice climb, comprising a 500-metre (1,600 ft) wall of ice or neve at an angle of up to 56 degrees, first climbed by Dietrich von Bethmann-Hollweg with Oskar and Othmar Supersaxo on 7 July 1911. This face was descended on skis by Heini Holzer on 22 July 1972.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b Lenzspitze, Switzerland at peakbagger.com, retrieved 20 February 2016
- ^ "Switzerland Travel".
Bibliography
[edit]- Dumler, Helmut; Burkhardt, Willi P. (1994). The High Mountains of the Alps. London: Diadem.
External links
[edit]- "The Lenzspitze". SummitPost.org. Retrieved November 8, 2011.