1.Mount Kurobegorō | ||||||
Mount Kurobegorō (黒部五郎岳, Kurobegorō-dake) is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains,[3] reaching the height of 2,839.58 m (9,316 ft). It is situated in Japan's Hida Mountains in Gifu Prefecture and Toyama Prefecture. It was specified for Chūbu-Sangaku National Park on December 4, 1934.[4] | ||||||
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Elevation: 2,897.48 m (9,506.2 ft)[1] Parent range: Hida Mountains | ||||||
2.Mount Suisho | ||||||
Mount Suisho (水晶岳, Suishō-dake, lit. "Mount Crystal"), also known as Kurodake or Mount Kuro (黒岳, Kuro-dake, lit. "Black Mountain"), is a mountain in the southeastern area of Toyama Prefecture, Japan. It is designated as one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains.[2] | ||||||
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Elevation: 2,986 m (9,797 ft)[1] Parent range: Hida Mountains | ||||||
3.Mount Yakushi | ||||||
Mount Yakushi (薬師岳, Yakushi-dake) is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains,[3] reaching the height of 2,926 m (9,600 ft). It is situated in Japan's Hida Mountains in Toyama Prefecture. It was specified for Chūbu-Sangaku National Park on December 4, 1934.[4] | ||||||
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Elevation: 2,926.01 m (9,599.8 ft)[1] Parent range: Hida Mountains | ||||||
4.Mount Washiba | ||||||
Mount Washiba (鷲羽岳, Washiba-dake) is a peak and complex of volcanoes in the Hida Mountains range of the Japanese Alps at 2924m, located in Nagano Prefecture and Toyama Prefecture, central Honshu, Japan. It is listed in 100 Famous Japanese Mountains.[2] | ||||||
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Elevation: 2,924 m (9,593 ft)[1] Parent range: Hida Mountains | ||||||
5.Mount Sekidō | ||||||
Mount Sekidō (石動山, Sekidōzan) is a 564 metres (1,850 ft) mountain on the border of Nanao and Nakanoto in Ishikawa Prefecture and the town of Himi, in Toyama Prefecture. It is also called Mount Isurugi (伊須流岐山, Isurugizan). Mount Sekidō was considered a holy mountain and was the center of a mountain cult since the Heian period. It was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1978.[1] It is located with the borders of the Noto Hantō Quasi-National Park. | ||||||
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Elevation: 564 m (1,850 ft) | ||||||
6.Mount Okukane | ||||||
Mount Okukane (奥鐘山, Okukane-yama) is a mountain located between the towns of Tateyama and Kurobe in Toyama Prefecture, Japan. The mountain has an elevation of 1,543 m (5,062 ft). Mount Okukane rises dramatically between the Kurobe Gorge and the Haba Valley to form, at 600 metres (2,000 ft), one of the foremost sheer rock faces in Japan.[1] The mountain is primarily composed of granite and is part of the Hida Mountains, also known as the Northern Japan Alps. Mount Okukane, together with the Kurobe and Sarutobi gorges, were designated a Special Natural Monument and Special Place of Scenic Beauty in 1964.A[2][3] | ||||||
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Elevation: 1,543 m (5,062 ft) | ||||||
7.Mount Goryu | ||||||
Mount Goryu (五竜岳, Goryu-dake) is a mountain in the Ushirotateyama Mountains in the Hida Mountains. The mountain body straddles Kurobe, Toyama and Ōmachi, Nagano, and the summit is mostly located on the Toyama side.[3] It is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains.[4] It is sometimes written as Goryu-dake with only "dragon" in the old font.[2] | ||||||
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Elevation: 2,814 m (9,232 ft)[1][2] Parent range: Hida Mountains (Ushirotateyama Mountains) | ||||||
8.Iozen | ||||||
Mount Iō (医王山, Iō-zen),[1] also Iozen, is a 939-metre (3,081 ft) tall mountain in Japan, on the border of Kanazawa City, Ishikawa and Nanto City, Toyama.[2] 36°30′46″N 136°47′46″E / 36.5127°N 136.7960°E / 36.5127; 136.7960 | ||||||
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9.Mount Kashimayari | ||||||
Mount Kashimayari (鹿島槍ヶ岳, Kashimayari-ga-dake) is a peak in the Hida Mountains range of the Japanese Alps at 2889m, located in Kurobe and Tateyama, Toyama and Ōmachi, Nagano, central Honshu, Japan.[3] It is part of Chūbu-Sangaku National Park[4] and is the second highest peak of the Ushirotateyama mountain range.[5][6] | ||||||
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Elevation: 2,889 m (9,478 ft)[1] Parent range: Hida Mountains | ||||||
10.Mount Tate | ||||||
Mount Tate (立山, Tate-yama, IPA: [tateꜜjama]), also known as Tateyama, is a mountain located in the southeastern area of Toyama Prefecture, Japan. It is one of the tallest mountains in the Hida Mountains at 3,015 m (9,892 ft) and one of Japan's Three Holy Mountains (三霊山, Sanreizan) along with Mount Fuji and Mount Haku.[2] Tateyama consists of three peaks: Ōnanjiyama (大汝山, 3,015 m), Oyama (雄山, 3,003 m), and Fuji-no-Oritate, (富士ノ折立, 2,999m)[3] which form a ridge line. Tateyama is the tallest mountain in the Tateyama Mountain Range (立山連峰, Tateyama-renpō). | ||||||
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Elevation: 3,015 m (9,892 ft)[1] Parent range: Hida Mountains | ||||||
11.Mount Tsurugi (Toyama) | ||||||
Mount Tsurugi (剱岳, Tsurugi-dake) is a mountain located in the eastern area of Toyama Prefecture, Japan. It is one of the tallest peaks in the Hida Mountains at 2,999 m (9,839 ft). It is one of the 100 Famous Japanese Mountains, and is called "the most dangerous mountain" climbable.[1] Tsurugi has a number of routes which approach world class long routes. It is recognised in Japan as "the" premiere mountaineering peak in winter. Although dangerous, its death toll is a small fraction of those who have died on Japan's much smaller, but more lethal Tanigawa-dake. | ||||||
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Elevation: 2,999 m (9,839 ft) Parent range: Hida Mountains |