Mont Giusalet Explained

Mont Giusalet
Elevation M:3312
Prominence M:835
Prominence Ref:[1]
Range:Cottian Alps
Listing:Alpine mountains above 3000 m
Location:Rhône-Alpes, France
Map:Alps
Coordinates:45.1833°N 6.9333°W

Mont Giusalet (3,313m - also called pointe du Clery) is a mountain in the Ambin group of the Cottian Alps in Savoie, France, near the Italian border.

Features

The mountain dominates the lower Susa Valley and the town of Susa in Italy, and can even be seen from a large area of the Po Valley.

The mountain, although lying on the Alpine watershed between the Val di Susa and the Arc valley, is entirely in French territory following the boundary adjustments decided in the 1947 Treaty of Paris .

Mont Giusalet is rocky on its southern slopes and covered by a glacier on its northern one. With the two smaller peaks: Cime de Bard (3,150 m) and Punta della Vecchia (2993 m), it forms a small mountain massif. The mountain looks like a long ridge about a mile long going from east to west with two peaks at either end. On the eastern summit lies an Iron Cross.

Sources

Maps

External links

Notes and References

  1. 13738. Mont Giusalet. 23 January 2015.