Hohe Munde
| Hohe Munde | |
|---|---|
The Hohe Munde from the Inn valley near Oberhofen
The Hohe Munde from the northeast seen from the Leutasch valley | |
| Highest point | |
| Elevation | 2,662 m (AA) (8,734 ft) |
| Prominence | 603 m ↓ Niedere Munde |
| Isolation | 5.4 km → Hinterreintalschrofen |
| Coordinates | 47°20′50″N 11°04′18″E / 47.34722°N 11.071528°E |
| Geography | |
| Parent range | Mieming Chain |
| Geology | |
| Rock age | Triassic |
| Mountain type | Wetterstein limestone |
| Climbing | |
| First ascent | East top: A. Sauter 1829; west top: Hermann von Barth 1871 |
| Easiest route | From Leutasch-Moos via the east flank (mountain track) |
The Hohe Munde is a 2,662-metre-high (8,734 ft) mountain at the eastern end of the Mieming Chain in the Austrian state of Tyrol. It has two peaks: the west top (2,662 m) and the east top or Mundekopf (2,592 m).