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Puy de Sancy

 
Wikipedia: Puy de Sancy
Puy de Sancy
Puy de Sancy1.jpg
Elevation 1,886 metres (6,188 ft)
Location Puy-de-Dôme departement,  France
Range Massif Central
Prominence 1,579 m (5,180 ft)
Coordinates 45°31′42″N 2°48′51″E / 45.52833°N 2.81417°E / 45.52833; 2.81417Coordinates: 45°31′42″N 2°48′51″E / 45.52833°N 2.81417°E / 45.52833; 2.81417
Listing Ultra

Puy de Sancy (Occitan: puèi de la Crotz) is the highest mountain in the Massif Central and therefore the highest mountain in central France (the highest in France except the Alps and the Pyrenees).

It is part of an ancient stratovolcano which has been inactive for about 220,000 years.

The northern and southern slopes are used for skiing, and a number of cablecars and skilifts ascend the mountain. Skiing has been practised on the mountain since the early 20th century. Two local priests traversed the Puy de Sancy on skis in 1905. In 1936, a cable car link was built from Mont-Dore to one of the needles just below the summit. In December 1965, a cable car accident injured ten passengers and killed seven others. Super-Besse is another ski resort, located on the southwestern slope.

The valley to the north is also the source of two streams called Dore and Dogne, which unite to form the Dordogne River, which flows through the nearby spa town of Mont-Dore and on to the Garonne estuary.

Puy de Sancy from the south

References

  • Cattermole, Peter (2001). Auvergne (Classic Geology in Europe 2). Terra Publishing. p. 176 pp. ISBN 1-903544-05-X. 

External links


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