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- Q10862618 subject Q6582734.
- Q10862618 subject Q9052747.
- Q10862618 abstract "The saddle between two hills (or mountains) is the area around the highest point of the (optimal) pass between the two massifs, i.e. around the lowest route on which one could pass between the two summits. It is often traversed by a track, road or railway, but need not be.The distinction between a saddle and a col is not always clear. For example, Whittow describes a saddle as "low point or col on a ridge between two summits", whilst the Oxford Dictionary of English implies that a col is the lowest point on the saddle. Monkhouse describes a saddle as a "broad, flat col in a ridge between two mountain summits."The term col tends to be associated more with mountain, rather than hill, ranges.The height of a summit above its highest saddle (called the key saddle) is effectively a measure of a hill's prominence, an important measure of the independence of its summit. Saddles lie on the line of the watershed between two hills.".
- Q10862618 thumbnail Bergsattel.jpg?width=300.
- Q10862618 wikiPageWikiLink Q1061151.
- Q10862618 wikiPageWikiLink Q133056.
- Q10862618 wikiPageWikiLink Q152005.
- Q10862618 wikiPageWikiLink Q2231510.
- Q10862618 wikiPageWikiLink Q54050.
- Q10862618 wikiPageWikiLink Q656751.
- Q10862618 wikiPageWikiLink Q6582734.
- Q10862618 wikiPageWikiLink Q7115311.
- Q10862618 wikiPageWikiLink Q9052747.
- Q10862618 comment "The saddle between two hills (or mountains) is the area around the highest point of the (optimal) pass between the two massifs, i.e. around the lowest route on which one could pass between the two summits. It is often traversed by a track, road or railway, but need not be.The distinction between a saddle and a col is not always clear.".
- Q10862618 label "Saddle (landform)".
- Q10862618 depiction Bergsattel.jpg.