Gleirscher Fernerkogel

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Elevation3,189 m (AA) (10,463 ft)
Prominence321 m Zwieselbachjoch
Gleirscher Fernerkogel
The Gleirscher Fernerkogel from the Winnebacher Weißkogel to the south
Highest point
Elevation3,189 m (AA) (10,463 ft)
Prominence321 m Zwieselbachjoch
Isolation3.1 km Strahlkogel
ListingAlpine mountains above 3000 m
Coordinates47°06′53″N 11°03′47″E / 47.11472°N 11.06306°E / 47.11472; 11.06306
Geography
Gleirscher Fernerkogel is located in Austria
Gleirscher Fernerkogel
Gleirscher Fernerkogel
Parent rangeStubai Alps
Climbing
First ascent1 September 1883 by Ludwig Purtscheller and Hans Schöller (touristic)
Normal routeGlacier tour from the Gleirschtal valley and up the east face

The Gleirscher Fernerkogel, also Gleirschfernerkogl, formerly called the Roßkarspitze, is a mountain, 3,189 m (AA), in the Southern Sellrain Mountains, a subgroup of the Stubai Alps. It rises in the Austrian state of Tyrol. The old name, Roßkarspitze, was given to it during the military survey of the region in the 1850s. The first documented ascent was undertaken on 1 September 1883 by Ludwig Purtscheller and Hans Schöller, a "professor from Salzburg". Purtscheller gave the mountain its present name. A prominent 500-metre-long ridge runs eastwards from the unimposing summit.

The Gleirscher Fernerkogel lies a good seven kilometres as the crow flies northeast of Längenfeld in the Ötztal valley and just under 7 km southwest Praxmar in the Lüsenstal valley. To the east two glaciers climb the mountain to a height of 3,100 metres. North of the east ridge is the Gleirschferner glacier; to the south is the Weißkogelferner, rapidly disappearing as a result of global warming, whose firn field is now only just under 300 metres long. Neighbouring peaks are the Hintere Grubenwand (3,175 m) on the east ridge, separated by the col of Roßkarscharte (3,053 m); the Winnebacher Weißkogel (3,185 m) to the south; and the Sonnenwände peaks to the north, whose highest top is the Hintere Sonnenwand (3,112 m). To the west the 500-metre-high rock face of the Gleirscher Fernerkogel drops steeply into the valley of the Zwieselbach.

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