Aiguille de Tré la Tête

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Aiguille de Tré la Tête
File:Trelatete.jpg
View of the Aiguille de Tré la Tête
Highest point
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Geography
Location Aosta Valley, Italy
(mountain partially in France)
Parent range Mont Blanc massif
Climbing
First ascent 12 July 1864 by Anthony Adams Reilly and Edward Whymper with Michel Croz, Michel Payot and H. Charlet

The Aiguille de Tré-la-Tête is a mountain in the south of the Mont Blanc massif. Its highest point, the central southeast pinnacle, is 3,930 metres (12,894 ft) above sea level and is located in Italy. Only the northwest pinnacle is situated on the border with France. It forms a chain with the Dômes de Miage.

It comprises four summits:

  • l'aiguille Nord or Tête Blanche (3,892 m) ; north top
  • l'aiguille centrale Nord-Ouest (3,846 m) ; central northwest top
  • l'aiguille centrale Sud-Est (highest point, 3,930 m) ; central southeast top
  • l'aiguille orientale (3,895 m); east top.

The western slope of the mountain is part of the Contamines-Montjoie Nature Reserve

History

In September 2007, the body of a young mountaineer, who had died in 1954, was discovered on the glacier. It was found by a hiker at an elevation of 2,500 metres below a mountain trail. After investigation, it was ascertained to be a 24-year-old man who had disappeared on 4 August 1954 with his 21-year-old brother and 16-year-old sister, returning from climbing the of the ascent the Aiguille de la Lex Blanche (3,697 m) The bodies of two younger people were found two kilometres above the foot of the glacier face.[citation needed]

Bibliography

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External links