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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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Fichtel Mountain Horseshoe

The High Fichtel Mountains (German: Hohes Fichtelgebirge), or High Fichtel, form a mountainous and heavily forested range consisting of several mountain chains in the shape of a horseshoe, the Fichtel Mountain Horseshoe (Fichtelgebirgs-Hufeisen), that rings the Selb-Wunsiedel Plateau.

As a natural region the High Fichtel Mountains are major unit 394 within the major unit group of the Thuringian-Franconian Highlands (39), that run from the Thuringian Forest to the Fichtel Mountains. Since September 2010 there is a new system for classifying the natural regions of northeast Bavaria, whereby the natural region of the High Fichtel only covers the central mountain region of the Scheeberg, Ochsenkopf and Kösseine, whilst the Waldstein ridge, the Steinwald and lower parts of the horseshoe represent special subordinate natural regions of the Fichtel Mountains.

Geography

The High Fichtel Mountains begin in the northeast at the Kornberg, continue via the Waldstein, Schneeberg, Ochsenkopf and Königsheide in the southwest to the Kösseine, then over the Steinwald and Reichsforst to the Kohlwald in the southeast.

In the geomorphological division of the neighbouring Czech Republic, the Aš Hills (German: Ascher Hügelland; Czech: Ašská vrchovina), the Hazlov Hills (Haslauer Hügelland or Hazlovská pahorkatina) and the Cheb Hills (Egerer Hügelland or Chebská pahorkatina) are counted as part of the (High) Fichtel range.

Geology

Geologically the mountain range consists mainly of granite. The history of its orogeny begins in the Pre-Cambrian about 750–800 million years ago – covering almost 20% of the earth's history, something which only applies to a few of the surviving ranges of the truncated Central Uplands of Germany today.

Mountains

The mountains of the High Fichtel include the following, sorted by their elevation in metres (m) above sea level (NN):

Mountain Height (m) Remarks
Schneeberg 1,051 Highest mountain in the Fichtel range, Haberstein (923 m) on its southwestern slopes
Ochsenkopf 1,024 Winter sport, chair and drag lifts, Weißmainfelsen (906 m) on the eastern slopes
Nußhardt 972
Seehügel 953 Ahornfels (910 m) on southwestern slope
Platte (Steinwald) 946
Kösseine 939 Subpeak of Kleine Kösseine (922 m)
Platte (Schneeberg) 885
Burgstein (Kösseine) 879 Burgsteinfelsen at 869.2 m, Luisenburg Kreuzfelsen (785 m) at northern foot
Großer Waldstein 877 Winter sport, cross-country skiing trails
Rudolfstein (Schneeberg) 866 Rock formation at the summit and Drei Brüder formation (850 m) 500 m to the southwest
Hohberg (Königsheide) 863 Winter sport, drag lifts
Weißenstein (Steinwald) 863
Bergkopf (Waldstein) 857 25 m high (817 m above NHN) graniterock formation of Hoher Stein at northeastern foot
Haberstein (Kösseine) 848
Großer Kornberg 827 Winter sport, drag lift and cross-country skiing trails
Hohe Matze 813 Prinzenfelsen (751 m) rock formation
Epprechtstein (Waldstein) 798 Winter sport, cross-country skiing trails
Lehstenberg 768
Schauerberg (Kösseine) 767
Schauerberg (Schneeberg) 732
Armesberg 731
Rabenberg (Schönwald) 713
Pfaffenberg (Schönwald) 710
Steinberg (Reichsforst) 705
Ruheberg (Reichsforst) 692 Summit region is a nature reserve
Wenderner Stein 686
Teichelberg 685
Fürstenstein (Fichtel) 675
Výhledy (German: Oberkunreuthberg) 656 Brunnenhaus
Sieben-Linden-Berg 643 Winter sport, drag lift
Zelená hora (German: Grünberg) 637 transmission tower, viewing tower
Kohlberg (Kohlwald) 632 observation tower
Glasberg 628 Dreifaltigkeitskirche Kappl
Dietzenberg 626
Lehenbühl 620 near Konnersreuth
Elmberg (Reichsforst) 618
Gossenbühl 616
Konnsbühl 613 near Konnersreuth

Settlements

Lakes and rivers

Transport

References

  1. ^ From Paleozoic to Quaternary: A Field Trip from the Franconian Alb to Bohemia edited by Ludwig Zöller. Retrieved 28 Jan 2014.
  2. ^ Travel Munich by MobileReference. Retrieved 28 Jan 2014.
  3. ^ E. Meynen and J. Schmithüsen: Handbuch der naturräumlichen Gliederung Deutschlands – Bundesanstalt für Landeskunde, Remagen/Bad Godesberg 1953-1962 (9 issues in 8 books, updated (1960) 1:1,000,000 map with major units)
  4. ^ Map services of the Federal Agency for Nature Conservation
  5. ^ "Karl Heinrich Vollrath: Viola in Nordostbayern (Seite 132-133)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-07-13. Retrieved 2014-01-28.
  6. ^ Smrčiny (Fichtel Mountains)

Sources