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THE DOLOMITES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 394 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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THE

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DOLOMITES  , a mountain
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district in the South Tirolese
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Alps, though sometimes it is erroneously considered to form
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part of some other chain than the Alps . The distinguishing feature of this district is that it is composed of magnesian
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limestone, which rises in peaks of a most singular degree of sharpness and streaked by
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veins of the most startling colours . Nowadays it has become well known to tourists, who, however, keep mainly to a few
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great centres, though most of the more striking peaks were first ascended in the
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late sixties and early seventies of the 19th century by
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English mountaineers . Roughly speaking the
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Dolomite region lies between the
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Brenner railway from Franzensfeste to Trent (W.) and the road over the
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Monte Croce Pass from Innichen in the Drave valley by way of the Sexten glen and the Piave valley to Belluno and Feltre (E.) . On the north it is limited by the railway
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line from Innichen to Franzenfeste, and on the south by the railway and road from Trent to Feltre . The highest
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summit is the Marmolata (10,972 ft.), but far more typical are the Sorapiss, the Cimon della Pala, the Langkofel, the Pelmo, the Drei Zinnen, the Sass
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Moor and the Rosengarten (see Anna) . Among the chief tourist resorts are St
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Ulrich (in the Groden valley),
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San Martino di Castrozza (near Primiero), Caprile and Cortina d'Ampezzo . Besides the Dolomites included in the above region there are several other Dolomite groups (though less extensive) in the Alps . N.W. of Trent rises the Tosa
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group, while in
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Switzerland there are the Piz d'Aela group, S.W. of Bergiin on the Albula Pass route, and the curious little group N. of the
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village of Splugen, besides other isolated peaks between the St Gotthard and Lukmanier Passes . In
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Dauphine itself (the home of the geologist
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Dolomieu) the mountain districts of the Royannais, of the Vercors, and of the Devoluy (all S.W. of
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Grenoble) are more or less Dolomitic in character . See J . Gilbert and G .

C .

Churchill, The Dolomite Mountains (
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London, 1864) ;
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Miss L . Tuckett, Zigzagging among Dolomites (London, 1871) ; P . Grohmann, Wanderungen in den Dolomiten (Vienna, 1877) ; L . Sinigaglia, Climbing Reminiscences of the Dolomites (London, 1896) ; The Climbs of Norman-Neruda (London, 1899) ; V . Wolf von Glanvell, Dolomitenfuhrer (Vienna, 1898) ; J . Ball, Western Alps (new ed., London, 1898, section 9, Rte . P . French Dolomites) . (W . A . B .

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