Monte Cistella

Coordinates: 46°15′34.0″N 8°15′11.0″E / 46.259444°N 8.253056°E / 46.259444; 8.253056
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Monte Cistella
Monte Cistella seen from Pizzo Diei
Highest point
Elevation2,880 m (9,450 ft)[1]
Prominence109 m (358 ft)[2]
Parent peakPizzo Diei
Coordinates46°15′34.0″N 8°15′11.0″E / 46.259444°N 8.253056°E / 46.259444; 8.253056
Geography
Monte Cistella is located in Alps
Monte Cistella
Monte Cistella
Location in the Alps
LocationPiedmont, Italy
Parent rangeLepontine Alps

Monte Cistella is a mountain roughly in the middle of the Lepontine Alps.

Description[edit]

It is wholly in Ossolan territory and comprises three main peaks: the horn (2780m), the Cistella peak (2880m) and pizzo Diei (2906m). It is unusual as a mountain as these three peaks are connected by large relatively flat plateaus at an altitude of over 2600m. They were probably smoothed out by large glaciers and the result is a highly individual mountain that is instantly recognisable (like the Matterhorn which is not far from it). It is the most symbolic mountain of the Ossola valley (not the tallest by far...Mount Rosa is at 4636m). But it is the most loved by the Ossolani, especially by the Vate dell'Ossola (maximum poet), Giovanni Leoni, who over one hundred years ago sang its praise. Ul Totorotela (Leoni's nickname) was one of the founders of the local Alpine Club as well as poet and traveller. He and his family had and still have a long connection with this mountain and over 100 years ago he campaigned to build a mountain hut, a shelter for keen alpinists that still bear his name.

SOIUSA classification[edit]

According to SOIUSA (International Standardized Mountain Subdivision of the Alps) the mountain is classified in the following way:[3]

  • main part = Western Alps
  • major sector = North-Western Alps
  • section = Lepontine Alps
  • subsection = Northwestern Lepontine Alps
  • supergroup = Catena Monte Leone-Blinnenhorn
  • group = Gruppo dello Helsenhorn
  • subgroup = Sottogruppo Cistella-Diei
  • code = I/B-10.I-A.2.b

References[edit]

  1. ^ IGM 1:25.000 topographic maps on www.pcn.minambiente.it
  2. ^ Retrieved from the IGM topographic maps. The key col is a saddle at 2,671 m.
  3. ^ Marazzi, Sergio (2005). Atlante Orografico delle Alpi. SOIUSA (in Italian). Priuli & Verlucca. ISBN 978-88-8068-273-8.