Skydda av Djävulen - The Devil's ShieldAffectionately dubbed The Gate to Icy Hell by the few locals (locals, meaning those within 50 kilometers of the Shield) that live there, the tunnel through Skydda av Djävulen is the most common entrance to the bases of the Huggtänder. Despite the Shield's impressive height, at 8,612 meters, it's actually one of the shortest peaks in the Huggtänder, which are home to the highest mountains in the world. The highest peaks scrape just over 12,000 meters, or 40,000 feet, and are nearly inaccessible by any means of travel. The mountains are situated in the northwest of the region, some 400 kilometers south of Gråskygge with 220 kilometers to the nearest coast. The Huggtänder also are the home of Algorah Prison, and the Shield serves as its sole access point. They make a common destination for extreme mountaineers, who try to scale the peaks each summer when the weather is nice(r).
The Shield got its name from the massive, 2,000 meter and completely vertical drop on the south face of the mountain. Carved into the rock, and 15 meters in diameter, is an ancient human face. No one is remotely aware of who--or what--carved it. Geologists have estimated the carving to be well over 6,000 years old, long before the first Spiritan explorers first set eyes upon what they would call Skydda av Djävulen. The carved bridge and tunnel that enters into the heart of the Huggtänder, too, was likely constructed at the same time. It's 14 kilometers long, directly through the base of the Shield, and emerges onto a large glacier that several other mountains are situated on. Even with today's most advanced technology, not to mention the super-extreme setting of the tunnel, it would take a high speed tunnel-boring machine over a year to dig a tunnel of that length. Calculations estimate that digging the tunnel by hand, into solid rock, would take well over 300 years. Theories include the assistance of time-travellers, to ancient aliens responsible for the tunnel.
Due to the sheer cliff on the south face and the extremely difficult terrain on the western side of the mountain, climbing up the north face is the only feasible way to ascend. It's an incredibly dangerous route, not because of its remoteness but simply because of how inaccessible the mountains are. The only close way in or out is through the south of the Shield, which is too small for everything but snowmobile and man. The Huggtänder are far too high for helicopters and propeller planes, and landing a jet on one of the glaciers is incredibly hazardous. Despite the danger, many try each year in earnest to climb the Shield. There's only a 2 in 3 chance of surviving the climb.