Reisseck Group

Reisseck Group

The Gmeineck peak seen from Spittal in the Drava valley
Highest point
Peak Reißeck
Elevation 2,965 m (9,728 ft)
Dimensions
Length 21 km (13 mi)
Geography

Location in the Alps

State Carinthia, Austria
Range coordinates 46°57′N 13°22′E / 46.95°N 13.36°E / 46.95; 13.36Coordinates: 46°57′N 13°22′E / 46.95°N 13.36°E / 46.95; 13.36
Parent range High Tauern
Ankogel Group
Geology
Type of rock Predominantly gneisses

The Reisseck Group or Reißeck Group (German: Reißeckgruppe) is a small mountain sub-range in the Austrian state of Carinthia. As the southern part of the Ankogel Group it belongs to the High Tauern range of the Central Eastern Alps.

Geography

The Reisseck Group is separated from the northern Ankogel Group by the Dösen valley, stretching east of Mallnitz up to the Dösener See alpine lake at a height of 2,270 m (7,450 ft), and the Gößgraben gorge down to the Malta Valley. Its eastern boundary is formed by the Malta and Lieser rivers with the town of Gmünd, separating it from the Gurktal Alps (Nock Mountains). To the south, it is bounded by the Möll valley and the neighbouring Kreuzeck Group.

The Reißeck Group including the Stoder and the Reißeck

The Reisseck Group is predominantly formed of gneisses. The highest peak in the mountain range is the Reißeck at 2,965 m (AA). Other significant summits are the Tristenspitz (2,930 m), the Hohe Leier (2,774 m) and the Gmeineck (2,592 m). The Kaponig valley in the northwestern Reisseck Group has been part of the High Tauern National Park since 2005.

In the Reisseck Group there are numerous mountain lakes, of which the Radlsee (Hoher See), the Hochalmsee (Spapniksee), the Zwenberger See and Mühldorfer See are the most important. The water is used by the Reißeck-Kreuzeck Hydropower Group to supply the hydroelectric power plants in the Reißeck municipality. For tourists the mountains are accessible from the Möll valley on the Reisseck Funicular. However, service on the former Reisseck Mountain Railway connection to the mountain lakes plateau discontinued in 2014. The former ski area has been closed.

Literature

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