Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Zuckerhütl

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Location
  
Tyrol, Austria

First ascent
  
1863

Parent range
  
Stubai Alps

Elevation
  
3,507 m

Prominence
  
1,033 m

Mountain range
  
Alps, Stubai Alps

Zuckerhütl httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Wilder Pfaff, Wilder Freiger, Sonklarspitze, Schrankogel, Habicht

The Zuckerhütl is a mountain in Tyrol, Austria. At 3,505 metres (11,499 feet), it is the highest peak of the Stubai Alps and lies at the southern end of the Stubaital Valley.

Contents

Map of Zuckerh%C3%BCtl, 6167 Neustift im Stubaital, Austria

It derives its name, the German for sugarloaf, from its conical shape. In nearby Italy it is known as Pan di Zùcchero, the Italian term for sugarloaf.

On the mountain's north face the huge Sulzenauferner glacier falls 1,000m from its summit, resembling an icefall which looks unclimbable without ladders. It is the views of this great glacier which give Zuckerhütl its name. On its south face a 500m high cliff drops down from the summit.

ClimbingEdit

The summit was first reached by the pioneering German alpinist Joseph Anton Specht in 1862. Specht was a founder member of the German Alpine Club. It is now a very popular destination due to it being the highest mountain of the Stubai Alps and because of the view from the summit, which takes in all the major peaks of the Stubai Alps, the Ötztal Alps, the Zillertal Alps and the Ortler Alps. The normal route is along the east ridge.

References

Zuckerhütl Wikipedia