Mont-Aux-Sources
Mont-aux-Sources is a mountain in Southern Africa that forms part of the Drakensberg Range. It is largely in Lesotho, with a small portion in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal and Free State provinces.
The Sentinel Car Park at Witsieshoek provides access to the top via chain ladders.
The mountain was dubbed Mont-aux-Sources ("Mountain of Sources") by two French Protestant missionaries in 1836 because it was a watershed for the Orange (south), Vaal (north), Tugela (east), and other rivers. It is a basalt plateau at an elevation of around 10,000 feet (3,050 m) and is largely located inside Lesotho. The plateau rises eastward to a peak of 10,823 feet (3,299 meters) along the Lesotho–KwaZulu/Natal boundary. At the western boundary of South Africa's Royal Natal National Park, that top and other neighboring summits of the plateau's edge form vast, high cliffs overlooking KwaZulu/Natal.
Elevation: 3,282 m (10,768 ft)
Prominence: 54 m (177 ft)