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Best Granitic

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Rankings use category fit, feature coverage, pricing signals, public reception, and recency. Affiliate relationships do not affect scores.

0.0 - 10.0
Best 1 Teton Massif

The Teton Massif is a prominent fault-block range located within Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming, USA. Characterized by its steep, glaciated granite peaks including Grand Teton, it represents a dramatic and isolated mountain front. This massif is notable for its challenging mountaineering oppor...

2 Sierra Nevada Massif (USA)

The Sierra Nevada Massif is a vast, glaciated granite mountain range located in California, USA. Characterized by its extensive batholith formations, it includes Mount Whitney, the nation’s highest peak. This area offers significant geological interest and provides opportunities for scientific study...

3 Kinabalu Massif

Mount Kinabalu (4,095 m) in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo, is the highest peak in Southeast Asia outside New Guinea and anchors a UNESCO World Heritage Site designated in 2000.

4 Coast Mountains Massif

The Coast Mountains of British Columbia form one of the longest ranges in North America, containing Mount Waddington (4,019 m), the highest peak entirely within Canada.

5 Sinai Massif

A granite mountain massif at the southern tip of Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, containing Mount Sinai (2,285 m), a site held sacred in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam.

6 Sawatch Massif

The Sawatch Range in central Colorado contains Mount Elbert (4,401 m), the highest peak in the Rocky Mountains and the second-highest summit in the contiguous United States.

7 Beartooth Massif

The Beartooth Mountains, straddling Montana and Wyoming, contain Granite Peak (3,904 m), Montana's highest point, and feature one of the most extensive high plateaus in the Rockies.

8 Peneda-Gerês Massif

A granite massif in northwestern Portugal forming the core of Peneda-Gerês National Park, the country's only national park, established in 1971.

9 Sangre de Cristo Massif

The Sangre de Cristo Mountains form the southernmost subrange of the Rockies, extending through southern Colorado and northern New Mexico with Blanca Peak reaching 4,374 m.

10 Black Hills Massif

The Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming are an isolated Precambrian dome rising above the Great Plains, reaching 2,207 m at Black Elk Peak (formerly Harney Peak).

11 Gredos Massif

The highest section of Spain's Sistema Central, reaching 2,592 m at Almanzor and home to a royal ibex reserve established by Alfonso XIII in 1905.

12 Trinity Alps Massif

The Trinity Alps Massif is the largest subrange of the Klamath Mountains in northern California, with peaks exceeding 2,700 m and a designated Wilderness Area of about 720,000 acres established in 1984.

13 Transverse Ranges Massif

The Transverse Ranges Massif is a system of east–west-trending mountain ranges in southern California—unusual in their orientation—spanning from Point Conception inland to the Mojave Desert and driven by a bend in the San Andreas Fault.

14 San Gabriel Mountains Massif

The San Gabriel Mountains Massif rises immediately north of Los Angeles, California, reaching 3,068 m at Mount San Antonio (Mount Baldy) and largely protected within Angeles National Forest.

15 San Bernardino Mountains Massif

The San Bernardino Mountains Massif in southern California contains San Gorgonio Mountain (3,506 m), the highest peak in Southern California, and supports the San Bernardino National Forest.

16 Tsaratanana Massif

The highest massif in Madagascar, located in the north of the island, containing Maromokotro (2,876 m), the highest peak in Madagascar.

17 Guadarrama Massif

A granite massif of the Sistema Central north of Madrid, Spain, designated a national park in 2013 and historically shaping the capital's climate and water supply.

18 Sila Massif

A high granite plateau in Calabria, southern Italy, one of the peninsula's largest forested areas and the core of Sila National Park established in 2002.

19 Sistema Central Massif

A mountain system running east-west across the Spanish Meseta, separating the northern and southern sub-plateaus with several peaks exceeding 2,500 m.

20 Fichtelgebirge

A low mountain massif in northeastern Bavaria, Germany, that serves as a major European watershed where the Main, Eger, Naab, and Saale rivers originate.

21 Montes de Toledo

A mountain range in central Spain forming the watershed between the Tagus and Guadiana rivers, with peaks reaching approximately 1,600 m.

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