Mont Puget | |
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![]() Mont Puget from theLuminy University campus | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 563 m (1,847 ft) |
Coordinates | 43°13′19″N05°27′31″E / 43.22194°N 5.45861°E /43.22194; 5.45861 |
Geography | |
Location | Bouches-du-Rhône,France |
Parent range | Calanques de Marseille |
Geology | |
Mountain type | Limestone |
Mont Puget is a mountain, part of Marseille-Cassiscalanques, located south-east ofMarseille. Like mostMarseille mountains, it is formed fromlimestone.
Often neglected by tourists, much interested by the Calanques themselves and by the sea, the Mont Puget can provide for some interesting hiking and climbing.
A very good trail leads to the very top of the mountain (like on most of Marseille mountain ranges, so that firefighters can get everywhere should a fire start).
However, one can also climb the mountain directly, which can provide many interesting experiences.
One of them are "stone rivers", or collections of numerous small stones "flowing" from the mountain at angles reaching 45 degrees.
The top of the mountain is covered with eroded limestone that sticks out in numerous needle-like spikes.
A stylized representation of Mont Pugetis displayed on the crest ofLuminy Faculty of Sciences, part of theUniversity of the Mediterranean Aix-Marseille II. The Luminy campus is located 1 km northwest of Mont Puget.
An urban legend insist that the mountain is named after the sculptorPierre Puget which is a curious misconception since the mountain's name predates the sculptor on maps by several millennia. The name Puget is a diminutive from the Provençal word "puech" that originates from the Latin "podium", hence an elevated place that designates a certain eminence.
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