Mühlsturzhörner

Großes Mühlsturzhorn

The Großes Mühlsturzhorn, Kleines Mühlsturzhorn, Grundübelhörner and Knittelhorn (from the left)
Highest point
Elevation 2,234 m above sea level (NHN) (7,329 ft)
Coordinates 47°35′26″N 12°47′50″E / 47.590419°N 12.797142°E / 47.590419; 12.797142Coordinates: 47°35′26″N 12°47′50″E / 47.590419°N 12.797142°E / 47.590419; 12.797142
Geography
Großes Mühlsturzhorn

Bavaria

Parent range Reiter Alm, Berchtesgaden Alps
Climbing
Normal route From the Stadelhorn (II)
Kleines Mühlsturzhorn
Highest point
Elevation 2,141 m above sea level (NHN) (7,024 ft)
Coordinates 47°35′29″N 12°48′06″E / 47.59129°N 12.80154°E / 47.59129; 12.80154
Geography
State/Province DE-BY
Parent range Reiter Alm, Berchtesgadener Alpen
Climbing
Normal route Eastern arête from the Grundübelscharte gap (II)

The Mühlsturzhörner are two summits in the Reiter Alm in the Berchtesgaden Alps in the Upper Bavarian county of Berchtesgadener Land. The Großes Mühlsturzhorn is 2,234 m above sea level (NHN) and its top is around 300 metres southeast of the Stadelhorn, not far from the border between Bavaria and Salzburg in Austria. The Kleines Mühlsturzhorn is located 280 metres east-northeast and has a height of 2,141 m above NHN.

Rockfall

On 8 September 1999, 250,000 m³ of rock broke off in the summit area of the Kleines Mühlsturzhorn and crashed into the Klausbach valley.

Alpinism

The unmarked normal route to the Großes Mühlsturzhorn runs from the northwest via the Mayrbergscharte gap and the Stadelhorn (grade II). There are other unmarked ascents from the north via the Mühlsturzkar (II) and up the south face (II).

Well known climbing tours are the Alte Südkante (grade VII-, first climbed in 1930 by Huber and Mitterer) and the Direkte Südkante (VI/A1 or VIII-, first achieved in 1936 by Anderl Hinterstoißer and Toni Kurz shortly before Kurz's death on the north face of the Eiger).

Literature

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Großes Mühlsturzhorn.
Heinrich Carl Schubert (1827–1897): Blick auf das Mühlsteinhorn
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