Monte Musinè or simply Musinè (in Piedmontesemont Musinè) is a mountain in the Graian Alps in the Metropolitan City of Turin, Piedmont, north Italy. Musinè is well known for the high cross on its peak, as well as for being the mountain closest to Turin. It is visible from the Piedmontese plateau and from the mountains in the provinces of Biella and Vercelli.
Geography
Mount Musinè is the easternmost mountain of the long ridge which, starting from Rocciamelone, divides the valleys of Susa and Lanzo.
Its main summit has a subsummit called Truc dell'Eremita (Hermit's hill, 1.101 m), and is surrounded by several minor hills. To the east on a 535 m high hill stands Saint Abaco's sanctuary, and to the northeast on Monte Calvo, 551 m high, there is a Via Crucis leading to a chapel.
Mount Musinè is connected to the neighbouring Mount Curto (1.323 m) by a broad wooded ridge, the lowest point of which is the Colle della Bassetta (Bassetta's pass, 945 m).
Two Roman buildings from the imperial period are located near the mountain: a villa rustica in Caselette and a large residential villa in Almese (Grange di Rivera).[7]
On the northeastern slopes of Mount Musinè several magnesite quarries were active between 1875 and the Second World War.[10]
UFO sightings
Several encounters with UFOs have been reported around the mountain from the 1970s onward.[11]
Quite well known is the case of December 8, 1978, when two young hikers walking on the slopes of the Musinè saw a bright light; one of them, after approaching it, temporarily disappeared.
His mate, with the help of some passers-by, searched for him and after a while found his friend in a state of shock and with a noticeable scald on one leg. After regaining consciousness the young man he reported having seen an elongated vehicle and that some strangely shaped beings descended from it, touching and hefting him. Both the young hikers suffered from conjunctivitis for some time.[12]
Nature conservation
The mountain and its surrounding area are included in a SIC (Site of Community Importance) of 1,524.29 ha called Monte Musine' e Laghi di Caselette (code IT1110081).[13]
^
Marazzi, Sergio (2005). Atlante Orografico delle Alpi. SOIUSA (in Italian). Priuli & Verlucca. p. 134. ISBN978-88-8068-273-8.
^A. Bertone et al., in "Quaderni della Soprintendenza Archeologica del Piemonte" 11 (1993), pp. 274-276
^A. Bertone, in "Quad. Sopr. Arch. Piem." 3 (1984), pp. 279-280
^E. Lanza, G. Monzeglio, I Romani in valle di Susa, S. Ambrogio 2001, pp. 71-76 e 92-97; D. Vota, Duemila anni fa in Valle di Susa. Il tempo dei Cozii, Borgone 2010, pag. 190-195 and 207-210, with reference biography
^Aldo Molino, Musiné Monte del mistero, article on Piemonte Parchi n.128 June/July 2003, pag.46-47