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What are the facts about the Dolomites?

The Dolomites, also known as the Dolomite Mountains, Dolomite Alps or Dolomitic Alps, are a mountain range in northeastern Italy. They form part of the Southern Limestone Alps and extend from the River Adige in the west to the Piave Valley in the east.



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The range and its characteristic rock take their name from the 18th-century French geologist Dieudonné Dolomieu, who made the first scientific study of the region and its geology. Geologically, the mountains are formed of light-coloured dolomitic limestone, which erosion has carved into grotesque shapes.

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The correct name of this phenomenon is enrosadira (rosa is the Italian word for pink). The Dolomites are made of calcium carbonate and magnesium carbonate rocks. Both these components assume that typical glow ranging from yellow to pink and mauve when the sun rises or falls and the sun rays reflect on the surface.

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The Dolomites owe their complex, awe-inspiring silhouette to a happy combination of structural and climatic factors. The former shape the principal features of the landscape and are the result of a surprising diversity of rocks and petrified architecture, their geodiversity.

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Ermanno Salvaterra, the famed “Man of Cerro Torre,” died in a fall on August 18 while guiding the Hartman-Krauss (IV+/5.5; 600m) on Campanile Alto, in the Dolomites. Salvaterra had climbed the classic route dozens of times before, and was placing a cam when his handhold ripped from the wall.

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The pioneers of the climbing in the Dolomites was genial mountaineers! Sometime they had studied these routes in many years of observations and tentatives. Many of these climbs of the Dolomites are authentic “labyrinths of rocks” into the big walls.

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The Dolomites, also known as the Pale Mountains, take their name from the carbonate rock dolomite. This was named after the 18th-century French mineralogist Déodat Gratet de Dolomieu (1750–1801), who was the first to describe the mineral.

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Basic safety in the Dolomites Never go alone into the backcountry in winter alone. Guided tours with UIAGM or IFMGA Professional Mountain Guides are a great option, but even if you choose not to participate in a guided tour, you should always hike with another person for safety's sake.

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THE DOLOMITES ARE EXPENSIVE BUT ALSO AFFORDABLE WITH THESE TIPS. We're not going to lie, the Dolomites can be very expensive, and for many travellers, prohibitively so. Accommodation, especially in popular areas, can exceed €200 per night and will likely be your largest cost.

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You can see the center of the Milky Way. RM 2FMBH47–Milky Way over the world famous Three Peaks in the Dolomites, Italy.

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The Dolomites straddle the northeastern border between Italy and Austria, running through the Italian provinces of Belluno, Alto Adige (also called South Tyrol), and Trentino. The highest point of the mountain rises nearly 11,000 feet above sea level.

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Dolomite is a mineral with formula of CaMg(CO3)2. The IMA symbol is Dol.

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