Mount Tahat
2908 m in Algeria
Mount Tahat is the highest mountain in Algeria and forms the baseline peak page for this country.
Full mountain guide is still being expanded.
Explore mountains, routes, and adventure trips in Algeria.
Choose a region first, then browse the mountains, routes, adventures, accommodation, activities, and planning towns within it.
2908 m in Algeria
Mount Tahat is the highest mountain in Algeria and forms the baseline peak page for this country.
Full mountain guide is still being expanded.
2739 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2328 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar in the Aurès Mountains, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2321 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2305 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2236 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar in the Ksour Range, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2180 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar in the Atakor, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2158 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar in the Tassili n'Ajjer, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2079 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar in the Hoggar Mountains, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2008 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar in the Saharan Atlas, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2004 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar in the Tell Atlas, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.
2004 m in Algeria
Significant summit in Ahaggar in the Atlas Mountains, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.