Type of low mountain range or hill country common in central Europe
A Mittelgebirge (pronounced[ˈmɪtl̩ɡəˌbɪʁɡə]ⓘ; German: Mittel, "middle or mid"; Gebirge, "mountains or mountainous area") is a type of relatively low mountain range or highland area typical of the geography of central Europe, especially central and southern Germany; it refers to something between rolling low hill country or Hügelland and a proper mountain range (German: Gebirge or Hochgebirge) like the High Alps.
Characteristics
The term is not precise, but typically refers to topography where the peaks rise at least 200 metres (660 ft) to 500 metres (1,600 ft) above the surrounding terrain (as opposed to above sea level). The summits usually do not reach the tree line and were not glaciated after the last glacial period. In contrast, Hochgebirge is used to refer to mountain ranges rising above approximately 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) to 1,800 metres (5,900 ft). The delineation corresponds with the differentation between Montane and Alpine level according to altitudinal zonation.
Mittelgebirge ranges
In the plural, die Mittelgebirge (as opposed to the singular, das Mittelgebirge), sometimes qualified as die deutschen Mittelgebirge, usually refers to the Central Uplands of Germany which is a belt of low mountain ranges or hills between the Northern Lowland and the BavarianAlpine Foreland.[1]
Along the Swiss-French border run the Jura Mountains, a fold mountain range reaching up to 1,718 metres (5,636 ft), separated from the western Alps by the Swiss Plateau. Though located within the Alpine foothills, the Jura Mountains are usually considered a separate Mittelgebirge range, while the Karst Plateau, leading to the Dinarides, geologically forms a part of the southern Alps.
^Due to its high vertical extent above the tree line (400 m in the Giant Mountains) and the existence of up to four altitudinal vegetation belts the Sudetes are considered a Mittelgebirge with some characteristics proper of high mountains.[2]
References
^Dickinson, Robert E (1964). Germany: A regional and economic geography (2nd ed.). London: Methuen, p. 18 ff. ASINB000IOFSEQ.
^Migoń, Piort (2008). "High-mountain elements in the geomorphology of the Sudetes, Bohemian Massif, and their significance". Geographia Polonica. 81 (1): 101–116.
External links
The dictionary definition of Mittelgebirge at Wiktionary