Rosalia Mountains
The Rosalia Mountains, sometimes called the Rosalie Mountains or Rosalien Mountains, are an outlier of the Alps on the state border between Lower Austria and Burgenland in Austria. The low mountain range runs from north to south and reaches its highest point at the summit of the Heuberg near Neudörfl, before descending again towards the village of Weppersdorf. They are separated from the Leitha Mountains to the north by the Ödenburg Gate.
From a geological perspective the Rosalia Mountains are part of the Bucklige Welt. The topographical boundary between the Bucklige Welt and the Rosalia is formed by the valley of the Klingfurther Bach, which runs from north to southeast and in which lie the villages of Klingfurth and Rosenbrunn. The boundary continues over the basin of the Hochwolkersdorf hamlet of Alm, along the so-called Totengraben in the Essengraben and then via the Graben into the valley of the Schwarzenbach.
In the east the range is adjoined by the Ödenburg or Sopron Mountains. The north–south boundary between them is formed by the Marzau, the Sieggraben Saddle and the Sieggrabenbach valley.
The following peaks are located in the northern Rosalia:
- Scheiben
- Mitterriegel
- Gespitzter Riegel
- Bergkogel
- Bauernmaiß
- Kogel
- Krieriegel
The following peaks are located in the southern Rosalia:
- Auerberg
- Hartlspitz
- Geißspitz
- Schwarzkogel
- Greimkogel
- Reisnerkogel
- Marriegel
- Sieggrabener Kogel
- Königsbühel
- Schwarzenbach Burgberg
- Roter Riegel
The Rosalia Mountains can only be crossed by the road from Mattersburg in Burgenland to Hochwolkersdorf in Lower Austria. In its lateral valleys, favourable conditions have led to extensive orchards and vineyards. A well-known village is the spa of Bad Sauerbrunn at their northern foot.
Literature
- Franz K. Bauer, Rudolph Oberhauser : Der Geologische Aufbau Österreichs. Geologische Bundesanstalt, Springer-Verlag, Vienna/New York, 2008,, .