Jezercë Explained

See also: Accursed Mountains.

Jezercë
Other Name:Maja e Rinisë
Map:Albania
Elevation:2694m (8,839feet)
Prominence:2036m (6,680feet)
Listing:Ultra-prominent
Parent Peak:Jezercë
Isolation:93.3km (58miles)
Coordinates:42.442°N 19.8126°W
Translation:Lakes Peak
Region:Northern Mountain Region
Settlement Type:Municipality
Settlement:Shkodër, Tropojë
Range:Accursed Mountains
Age:Triassic
Type:massif
Geology:limestone, dolomite
First Ascent:1929 by Sleeman, Elmslie and Ellwood
Easiest Route:North slope

Jezercë (Albanian: Jezerca) is the highest peak in the Dinaric Alps, the second highest in Albania and the sixth highest in Southeast Europe, standing at 2694m (8,839feet) above sea level. It is the 28th most prominent mountain peak in Europe, and is regarded as one of the toughest and most dangerous climbs in the Albanian Alps.[1]

Etymology

The toponym Jezerca derives from the Slavic word jezero 'lake', in reference to the cirque lakes in the lower part of the Buni i Jezercës on the northern side of the mountain. During communist rule, it was given the name Albanian: Maja e Rinisë, which never stuck.[2]

Geology

Jezercë is situated within the Accursed Mountains range, which is noted for several small glaciers - among the southernmost glacial masses in Europe[3] after Snezhnika glacier (latitude of 41°46′09″ N)[4] and Banski Suhodol Glacier in Pirin mountain in Bulgaria. Apart from certain areas north of the peak, the limestone mountain massif is part of the Alps of Albania National Park. It can be climbed from the north; most climbers come from Gusinje in Montenegro as well as from Theth.

The summit is 5km (03miles) from the border with Montenegro, between the valleys of Valbonë to the east and the Shala to the west. In part, the whole floor between the valley of Valbonë, Shala, Ropojana and Maja e Roshit 2522m (8,274feet) is known as the Jezercë Block. Additionally, Jezercë borders other peaks such as Maja e Popllukës 2569m (8,428feet) and Maja e Alies 2471m (8,107feet) to the west, Maja a Rragamit 2478m (8,130feet) to the east, Maja Kolaj 2498m (8,196feet), Maja e Malësores 2490m (8,170feet), Maja e Bojës 2461m (8,074feet) in the northwest, Maja e Kokërdhakut 2508m (8,228feet) and Maja e Etheve 2393m (7,851feet) in the north.

Jezerca is a large rocky peak of dolomitic limestone. There is almost no vegetation there. North, east and west of the mountain top is in great cirque from that in the glacial periods when glaciers were more extensive than today. Today the northern cirque is called Buni i Jezercës at a height of and in height around . Because it is located in the wettest region of Europe with around 6m (20feet) of rainfall equivalent believed to fall on the western slopes, snowfall is so great that only in dry years do even the less exposed sections melt away.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: EUROPE ULTRA-PROMINENCES 99 Peaks with Prominence of 1,500 metres or greater. peaklist.org. en.
  2. Web site: Summipost: Jezerca . 2 August 2009.
  3. Web site: Feasibility Study on Establishing a Transboundary Protected Area Prokletije / Bjeshkët E Nemuna Mountains. condesan.org. 4. en. The number of glacial ponds in this area is rare for the European mainland and can only be compared to the Alps.. 2017-07-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20170906040102/http://condesan.org/mtnforum/sites/default/files/publication/files/prokletije_25-10-2010.pdf. 2017-09-06. dead.
  4. Grunewald . K . Scheithauer . J . Europe's southernmost glaciers: response and adaptation to climate change . Journal of Glaciology . 2010 . 56 . 195 . 129-142 . 10.3189/002214310791190947 .