List of mountains in Poland

This is a sub-article to Geography of Poland

Two major mountain ranges populate Poland's south-east and south-west borders, respectively: the Sudetes and Carpathian Mountains mountain ranges. Those ranges are located both within and outside of Poland. Within Poland, neither of them is forbidding enough to prevent substantial habitation; the Carpathians are especially densely populated. The rugged form of the Sudeten range derives from the geological shifts that formed the later Carpathian uplift. The Carpathians in Poland, formed as a discrete topographical unit in the relatively recent Tertiary Era, are the highest mountains in the country. They are the northernmost edge of a much larger range that extends into the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Ukraine, Hungary, and Romania.

The Świętokrzyskie Mountains, one of the oldest mountain ranges in Europe, are located in central Poland, in the vicinity of the city of Kielce. The mountain range consists of a number of separate ranges, the highest of which is Łysogóry (lit. bald mountains). Together with the Jura Krakowsko-Częstochowska the mountains form a region called the Lesser Poland Upland (Wyżyna Małopolska). They were formed during the Caledonian orogeny of the Silurian period and then rejuvenated in the Hercynian orogeny of the Upper Carboniferous period.

Polish mountain ranges

List of mountains

Name Elevation (m/ft) Mountain Range
Rysy[1] 2,503 8,212 Tatras (Eastern)
Mięguszowiecki Szczyt Wielki 2,438 7,999 Tatras (Eastern)
Niżnie Rysy 2,430 7,970 Tatras (Eastern)
Mięguszowiecki Szczyt Czarny 2,410 7,910 Tatras (Eastern)
Mięguszowiecki Szczyt Pośredni 2,393 7,851 Tatras (Eastern)
Cubryna 2,376 7,795 Tatras (Eastern)
Świnica 2,301 7,549 Tatras (Eastern)
Kozi Wierch 2,291 7,516 Tatras (Eastern)
Zamarła Turnia 2,179 7,149 Tatras (Eastern)
Kościelec 2,155 7,070 Tatras (Eastern)
Mnich 2,068 6,785 Tatras (Eastern)
Starorobociański Wierch 2,176 7,139 Tatras (Western)
Jarząbczy Wierch 2,137 7,011 Tatras (Western)
Kamienista 2,126 6,975 Tatras (Western)
Krzesanica 2,122 6,962 Tatras (Western)
Wołowiec 2,064 6,772 Tatras (Western)
Kasprowy Wierch 1,987 6,519 Tatras (Western)
Giewont 1,894 6,214 Tatras (Western)
Trzy Korony 982 3,222 Pieniny Środkowe
Nowa Góra 902 2,959 Pieniny Środkowe
Flaki 803 2,635 Pieniny Środkowe
Skrzyczne 1,257 4,124 Silesian Beskids
Barania Góra 1,220 4,000 Silesian Beskids
Małe Skrzyczne 1,211 3,973 Silesian Beskids
Wierch Wisełka 1,192 3,911 Silesian Beskids
Równiański Wierch 1,160 3,810 Silesian Beskids
Zielony Kopiec 1,152 3,780 Silesian Beskids
Malinowska Skała 1,152 3,780 Silesian Beskids
Magurka Wiślańska 1,140 3,740 Silesian Beskids
Klimczok 1,117 3,665 Silesian Beskids
Malinów 1,115 3,658 Silesian Beskids
Magura 1,109 3,638 Silesian Beskids
Magurka Radziechowska 1,108 3,635 Silesian Beskids
Trzy Kopce 1,082 3,550 Silesian Beskids
Stołów 1,035 3,396 Silesian Beskids
Glinne 1,034 3,392 Silesian Beskids
Przysłop 1,029 3,376 Silesian Beskids
Szyndzielnia 1,028 3,373 Silesian Beskids
Muronka 1,021 3,350 Silesian Beskids
Jaworzyna 1,020 3,350 Silesian Beskids
Kościelec 1,019 3,343 Silesian Beskids
Czantoria Wielka 995 3,264 Silesian Beskids
Kiczory 990 3,250 Silesian Beskids
Stożek Wielki 978 3,209 Silesian Beskids
Kopa Bukowska 1,320 4,330 Bieszczady Mountains
Tokarnia 778 2,552 Low Beskids

See also

References

  1. ^ "Rysy". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 2018-08-30.

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