1.Mount Takami | ||||||
Mount Takami (高見山, Takami-san/Takami-yama) is a 1,248.3 m (4,095 ft) mountain of Daiko Mountains, which is located on the border of Higashiyoshino, Nara, and Matsusaka, Mie, Japan | ||||||
Wikipedia Details | ||||||
Elevation: 1,248.3 m (4,095 ft) Parent range: Daiko Mountains | ||||||
2.Mount Hinokizuka Okumine | ||||||
Mount Hinokizukia Okumine (桧塚奥峰, Hinokizuka-okumine) is a 1,420 m (4,659 ft) mountain, in Matsusaka, Mie, Japan. | ||||||
Wikipedia Details | ||||||
Elevation: 1,420 m (4,660 ft) Parent range: Daikō Mountains | ||||||
3.Mount Myōjin | ||||||
Mount Myōjin (明神岳, Myōjin-dake) is a 1,432 m (4,698 ft) mountain, on the border of Matsusaka, Mie and Kawakami, Nara, Japan. This mountain is one of Daikō Mountains. | ||||||
Wikipedia Details | ||||||
Elevation: 1,432 m (4,698 ft) Parent range: Daikō Mountains | ||||||
4.Mount Oike | ||||||
Mount Oike (御池岳, Oikegatake) is a mountain with an altitude of 1,247 m in the Suzuka Mountains in Higashiōmi, Shiga Prefecture. The northeastern side of the hillside is located on the border with Inabe, Mie Prefecture. It is the highest peak in the Suzuka Mountains and Higashiōmi. | ||||||
Wikipedia Details | ||||||
Elevation: 1,247 m (4,091 ft)[1] Parent range: Suzuka Mountains | ||||||
5.Mount Gozaisho | ||||||
Mount Gozaisho (御在所岳, Gozaisho-dake) is a Japanese mountain located on the border of Komono, Mie Prefecture and Higashi-Ōmi, Shiga Prefecture. This mountain is the center of Suzuka Quasi-National Park. | ||||||
Wikipedia Details | ||||||
Elevation: 1,212 m (3,976 ft) Parent range: Suzuka Mountains | ||||||
6.Mount Ōdaigahara | ||||||
Ōdaigahara-san or Ōdaigahara-yama (大台ヶ原山), also Hinode-ga-take or Hide-ga-take (日出ヶ岳) is a mountain in the Daikō Mountain Range on the border between the prefectures of Mie and Nara, Japan. It is the highest in Mie at 1,695 metres (5,561 ft). Walking trails from the Nara side start from a car park at about 1400 metres. The mountain is famous for wild deer, and also for wild birds, especially wrens and Japanese robins, as well as treecreepers and woodpeckers. In 1980, an area of 36,000 hectares in the region of Mount Ōdaigahara and Mount Ōmine was designated a UNESCO Man and the Biosphere Reserve.[1] | ||||||
Wikipedia Details | ||||||
Elevation: 1,695 m (5,561 ft) |