For millennia, hunters and gatherers had advanced into the highest rocky regions and had probably also climbed some peaks. There is evidence that the Jesuit priest Franz von Wulfen from Klagenfurt climbed the Lungkofel and the Dürrenstein in the 1790s. In 1857 Irishman
John Ball was the first known person to climb Monte Pelmo.
Paul Grohmann later climbed numerous peaks such as the Antelao, Marmolada, Tofana, Monte Cristallo and the Boè. Around 1860 the Agordin mountaineer Simone de Silvestro was the first person to stand on the Civetta.
Michael Innerkofler was one of the climbers of the
Tre Cime di Lavaredo. Later very important local mountaineers, known for many first ascents, were
Angelo Dibona and
Giovanni Piaz. During the
First World War, the front line between the Italian and
Austro-Hungarian Army ran through the Dolomites, where both sides used
mines extensively. Open-air war museums are at Cinque Torri ("Five Towers"), Monte Piana and Mount Lagazuoi. Many people visit the Dolomites to climb the
vie ferrate, protected paths through the rock walls that were created during the war. A number of long-distance footpaths traverse the Dolomites. They are called ( – "high paths"), and are numbered 1 to 10. The trails take about a week to walk, and are served by numerous ("huts"). The first and the most renowned is the
Alta Via 1.
Radiocarbon dating has been used in the Alta Badia region to demonstrate a connection between landslide activity and climate change. == Geography ==