Lübbenau Mountains

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Lübbenau Mountains
Felsőerdő Hegy (Hungarian) Lübbænu (Götaish)
13380931.jpg
Lübbenau Mountains, on the border of Lyonheimer and Blechingia
Highest point
PeakMount Varsaves
Elevation5,281 m (17,326 ft)
Naming
Etymologynamed by Blechingian explorers
Native nameLübbænu, Felsőerdő Hegy
Pronunciationlu-ben-ew
Geography
Screenshot 2021-02-26 133204.png
location of the Lübbenau Mountains
LocationBlechingia, Lyonheimer and Medovia
Geology
Age of rock463 Million years
Climbing
First ascent1643, by Uves Hidegkuti
Easiest routethrough the Blechingi-Lyonheimer southern border

The Lübbenau is a large mountain range in southern Thrismari, that stretches from southern Lyonheimer to Medovia. The range acts as a natural border between Lyonheimer, Blechingia and Medovia.

The highest point is 5,281m, which is Mount Varsaves on the border of Lyonheimer and Medovia.First scaled by mountaineerer Uves Hidegkuti in 1643, Mount Varsaves is a tourist location that brave mountaineerers attempt to scale each year.

Highest Mountains

The 12 Alpine four-thousanders with at least 300 metres of topographic prominence[1]
Name Height Name Height Name Height
Mount Varsaves 5,281 m (17,326 ft) 4,102 m (13,458 ft) 4,102 m (13,458 ft)
Wolfsberg 4,409 m (14,465 ft) 4,206 m (13,799 ft) 4,078 m (13,379 ft)
4,545 m (14,911 ft) 4,199 m (13,776 ft) 4,063 m (13,330 ft)
4,533 m (14,872 ft) 4,193 m (13,757 ft)

Lakes and Rivers

The Lübbenau Mountains provide lowland Lyonheimer and Blechingia with drinking water, irrigation,hydroelectric power.

Major rivers of the region include the

Climate

Largest cities

History

The first Humans to inhabent the region.

During the early years of the 20th Century Blechingia and Lyonheimer fought in the Great War which saw great conflict in the mountains, with the Southern Front taking part here

Image Collection

Mountaineeringpromojpg.jpg Uves Hidegkuti's climb, 1643

Lake Aedratic.jpg Lake Aedratic,located on the border of Blechingia & Lyonheimer

Bdb09fb72480edd3d448146966baea99.jpg Mount Varsaves, tallest mountain in Lübbenau Mountain range

  1. "4000 m Peaks of the Alps". Bielefeldt.de. July 6, 2010. Retrieved August 9, 2012.