Mount Elie de Beaumont
Mount Elie de Beaumont
Location in New Zealand
Mount Elie de Beaumont is a 3,109 metres (10,200 ft) high mountain in the Southern Alps on the South Island of New Zealand and the northernmost Three-thousander of the country. It is surrounded by several glaciers like Johannes Glacier in the north, Burton Glacier to the east, Times Glacier to the west and Anna Glacier, a tributary to the Tasman Glacier, in the south.[1] It was named by Julius von Haast after the french geologist Jean-Baptiste Élie de Beaumont.[2]
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mount Elie de Beaumont.
- ^ a b c "Topographic map". NZTopoMap. Retrieved 30 May 2021.
- ^ "New Zealand Gazetteer". Retrieved 1 December 2022.
- v
- t
- e
Aoraki / Mount Cook National Park, New Zealand
- Aoraki / Mount Cook
- Dixon Peak
- Douglas Peak
- Glacier Peak
- La Perouse
- Lendenfeld Peak
- Malte Brun
- Mount Dampier
- Mount Elie de Beaumont
- Mount Haidinger
- Mount Hamilton
- Mount Hicks
- Mount Ollivier
- Mount Sefton
- Mount Tasman
- Mount Vancouver
- Silberhorn
- Mount Cook Range
- Two Thumb Range
- Hooker Glacier
- Mueller Glacier
- Murchison Glacier
- Tasman Glacier
- Blue Lake
- Hooker Lake
- Tasman Lake
- Godley River
- Hooker River
- Murchison River
- Tasman River
This West Coast Region (New Zealand) geography article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e