Giant Mountains, mountains, major segment of the Sudeten in northeastern Bohemia and part of the western Czech-Polish frontier. The highest peak in both the mountains and Bohemia is Sněžka (5,256 feet [1,602 m]). The Elbe (Czech: Labe) River rises in Bohemia on the southern slope, and tributaries of the Oder (Odra) River flow northward from the Polish side.
The traditional textile industry—wool, cotton, and linen—is centred at Liberec, Czech Republic. Quartz is used in making Bohemian glass in some of the southern foothills, notably at Jablonec nad Nisou. Glassmaking is typified by the small works that extend high up the slopes of the mountains, with prominent forge chimneys attached to each cottage. These activities, together with machine production and timber working, account for most of the region’s employment. A railway line from Prague runs across the mountains and branches off to Görlitz (Germany) and Wrocław (Poland). The main road from Prague to Wrocław crosses near Náchod, Czech Republic. Extensive beech, pine, and fir forests and hiking trails and ski slopes support a year-round tourist industry with centres at Vrchlabí, Jilemnice, Trutnov, Špindlerův Mlýn, and Janské Lazně in the Czech Republic and at Szklarska Poręba and Karpacz in Poland. Both the Czech Republic and Poland have parts of the area under protection as nature preserves.