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tour+percée Latitude and Longitude:

45°22′10″N 5°54′17″E / 45.36944°N 5.90472°E / 45.36944; 5.90472
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

45°22′10″N 5°54′17″E / 45.36944°N 5.90472°E / 45.36944; 5.90472

Tour Isabelle, February 2021
Tour Isabelle in the morning light, August 2018

The Tour Percée double arch, also named the Tour Isabelle arch, is a double natural arch, located in the Parc Naturel Régional de la Chartreuse, Chartreuse Mountains, France.

Its span is 32 metres (105 ft), which makes it the widest natural arch in the Alps.

It remained unknown for probably everybody, until its discovery in May 2005, when Pascal Sombardier, who was trekking to write his book Chartreuse inédite : Itinéraires insolites, dealing with lost places of the range, discovered it fortuitously. Its pictures illustrated the front cover of his book, published in 2006 : this double arch became then the symbol of the hidden treasures of the Chartreuse Mountains. [1]

Located in a very remote area, with a difficult and dangerous access, very few guide books, even the most recent ones, mention its existence.

References

  1. ^ Sombardier, Pascal (2006). Chartreuse inédite : Itinéraires insolites [Unprecedented Chartreuse: Unusual Itineraries] (in French). Grenoble: Glénat. ISBN  2723453960.



tour+percée Latitude and Longitude:

45°22′10″N 5°54′17″E / 45.36944°N 5.90472°E / 45.36944; 5.90472
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

45°22′10″N 5°54′17″E / 45.36944°N 5.90472°E / 45.36944; 5.90472

Tour Isabelle, February 2021
Tour Isabelle in the morning light, August 2018

The Tour Percée double arch, also named the Tour Isabelle arch, is a double natural arch, located in the Parc Naturel Régional de la Chartreuse, Chartreuse Mountains, France.

Its span is 32 metres (105 ft), which makes it the widest natural arch in the Alps.

It remained unknown for probably everybody, until its discovery in May 2005, when Pascal Sombardier, who was trekking to write his book Chartreuse inédite : Itinéraires insolites, dealing with lost places of the range, discovered it fortuitously. Its pictures illustrated the front cover of his book, published in 2006 : this double arch became then the symbol of the hidden treasures of the Chartreuse Mountains. [1]

Located in a very remote area, with a difficult and dangerous access, very few guide books, even the most recent ones, mention its existence.

References

  1. ^ Sombardier, Pascal (2006). Chartreuse inédite : Itinéraires insolites [Unprecedented Chartreuse: Unusual Itineraries] (in French). Grenoble: Glénat. ISBN  2723453960.



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