Mountains Over 2500 Meters
Mountain | Meters | Feet | Prefecture |
---|---|---|---|
Mount Tsurugi (Tsurugi-dake) | 2,999 | 9,839 | Toyama |
Mount Suisho (Suisho-dake) | 2,986 | 9,797 | Toyama |
Mount Kaikoma | 2,967 | 9,734 | Nagano / Yamanashi |
Mount Kisokoma | 2,956 | 9,698 | Nagano |
Mount Shirouma | 2,932 | 9,619 | Nagano / Toyama |
Mount Yakushi | 2,926 | 9,600 | Toyama |
Mount Washiba | 2,924 | 9,593 | Nagano / Toyama |
Mount Aka (Yatsugatake) | 2,899 | 9,511 | Nagano / Yamanashi |
Mount Kasa | 2,897 | 9,505 | Gifu |
Mount Kashimayari | 2,889 | 9,478 | Toyama/Nagano |
Mount Utsugi | 2,863.7 | 9,395 | Nagano |
Mount Jōnen | 2,857 | 9,373 | Nagano |
Mount Sannosawa | 2,846.5 | 9,339 | Nagano |
Mount Minamikoma | 2,841 | 9,321 | Nagano |
Mount Kannon (Hōō-zan) | 2,840 | 9,318 | Yamanashi |
Mount Kurobegorō | 2,839.6 | 9,316 | Gifu / Toyama |
Mount Yoko (Southern Yatsugatake) | 2,829 | 9,281 | Nagano / Yamanashi |
Mount Goryu | 2,814 | 9,232 | Nagano / Toyama |
Mount Akanagi | 2,798 | 9,180 | Nagano |
Mount Yakushi (Hōō-zan) | 2,780 | 9,121 | Yamanashi |
Mount Jizō (Hōō-zan) | 2,764 | 9,068 | Yamanashi |
Mount Tsubakuro | 2,763 | 9,065 | Nagano |
Mount Iō (Yatsugatake) | 2,760 | 9,055 | Nagano |
Mount Haku | 2,702.2 | 8,865 | Gifu / Ishikawa |
Mount Nokogiri (Akaishi) | 2,685 | 8,809 | Nagano/Yamanashi |
Mount Tengu | 2,646 | 8,681 | Nagano |
Mount Neishi | 2,603 | 8,540 | Nagano |
Mount Kinpu | 2,599 | 8,527 | Nagano/Yamanashi |
Mount Yumiori | 2,592 | 8,504 | Gifu |
Mount Tekari | 2,591.1 | 8,501 | Shizuoka / Nagano |
Mount Nikko-Shirane | 2,578 | 8,458 | Gunma / Tochigi |
Mount Asama | 2,568 | 8,425 | Gunma / Nagano |
Mount Tateshina | 2,533 | 8,310 | Nagano |
Read more about this topic: List Of Mountains And Hills Of Japan By Height
Famous quotes containing the words mountains and/or meters:
“O God, that one might read the book of fate,
And see the revolution of the times
Make mountains level, and the continent,
Weary of solid firmness, melt itself
Into the sea.”
—William Shakespeare (15641616)
“In our Mechanics Fair, there must be not only bridges, ploughs, carpenters planes, and baking troughs, but also some few finer instruments,rain-gauges, thermometers, and telescopes; and in society, besides farmers, sailors, and weavers, there must be a few persons of purer fire kept specially as gauges and meters of character; persons of a fine, detecting instinct, who note the smallest accumulations of wit and feeling in the bystander.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)