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Moncodeno

Coordinates: 45°58′08″N 9°22′27″E / 45.969024°N 9.374271°E / 45.969024; 9.374271
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Moncodeno
Highest point
Elevation2,410 m (7,910 ft)[1]
Coordinates45°58′08″N 9°22′27″E / 45.969024°N 9.374271°E / 45.969024; 9.374271
Geography
Moncodeno is located in Alps
Moncodeno
Moncodeno
Location in the Alps
LocationLombardy, Italy
Parent rangeBergamo Alps
Moncodeno in autumn covered with snow

Moncodeno (Moncoeuden in Lombard) is a Cirque[2] on the northern mountain slope of the Grigna, part of the Bergamasque Alps in the province of Lecco, Lombardy, northern Italy. It takes its name from the pasture of the same name. Mostly located in the administrative territory of the municipality of Esino Lario, a small part is situated in Cortenova.

Geography

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Ghiacciaia del Moncodeno, cave entrance

The geography is mainly karst and there are hundreds of caves. The most notable of these are the complesso del Releccio Alfredo Bini (it), with a depth of 1,313 metres (4,308 ft), making it one of the deepest caves in Italy, as well as the Ghiacciaia del Moncodeno (it) (Icebox of Moncodeno), a cave,[3] visited by Leonardo da Vinci that stays icy even in summer.

History

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Capanna Moncodeno (1881)

In 1881, the 14th Congress of Italian mountaineers convened in Milan. The delegates of the Italian Alpine Club (CAI) were invited to attend a ceremony in Lombardy in the area known to the scientific world for the studies of Milan's CAI section president, the abbot and Lecco geologist, Antonio Stoppani, who founded the Capanna Moncodeno (hut). It is the first refuge built for Grigna researchers. The hut was destroyed by an avalanche in 1897. The Monza CAI rebuilt it close by in 1906 and named it Capanna Monza. This was set on fire and destroyed again by the Fascists in 1944. A new building was rebuilt and opened in 1951, named Rifugio Arnaldo Bogani.

References

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  1. ^ "European high-prominence peaks". peaklist.org. Retrieved 2014-05-19.
  2. ^ Paola Tognini. "Il Grignone nascosto: le grotte della Grigna Settentrionale" (PDF) (in Italian).
  3. ^ Kardel & Maquet 2012, p. 277.

Bibliography

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