Kollata is a massif in the Albanian Alps, located between Kukaj stream and Valbonë pass in the west, the upper Valbonë Valley in the south, Cerem basin in the east and extending beyond the state border with Montenegro to the north.
[1] The massif is composed entirely of a carbonate structure, with its surrounding slopes representing the plains of tectonic faults, cutting into the nearby valleys.
Here, where the cirques of the northeastern and eastern slopes end, two glacial-karst pits form, Mijusha and Lugu i Madh, both hanging over the Cerem basin.
The peak section of the massif between Kollata and Maja e Rosit is divided by three troughs which have been shaped by glacial activity and formed along normal tectonic faults.
As the altitude increases, the landscape transitions to alpine pastures, filling the higher reaches of the massif.