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Changtse

Mountain in Tibet

Changtse

Summary

Mountain in Tibet

FieldValue
nameChangtse
photoChangtse-from-KalaPattar.jpg
elevation_m7543
elevation_ref
Ranked 44th
prominence_m497
prominence_ref
mapChina Tibet topography#China
map_size270
label_positiontop
translationNorth Peak
languageTibetan
locationTibet Autonomous Region, China
rangeMahalangur Himal
coordinates
first_ascentOctober 1982
easiest_routesnow/ice climb

Ranked 44th Changtse (, ) is a mountain situated between the Main Rongbuk and East Rongbuk Glaciers in Tibet Autonomous Region, China, immediately north of Mount Everest. It is connected to Mount Everest via the North Col.

The given elevation of 7,543 metres is from modern Chinese mapping. Some authorities give 7,583 metres instead.

The Changtse Glacier flows north into the East Rongbuk Glacier. It is possible that the third highest lake in the world is in the Changtse Glacier at 6216 m.

Timeline

  • 1924 George Mallory and Andrew Irvine first to set foot on Changtse. They climbed the east ridge of Changtse to reconnoiter camp sites on the East Rongbuk Glacier.
  • 1935 During the Mount Everest Reconnaissance a team with Eric Shipton, Edmund Wigram and Bill Tilman attempted the North Peak from their Camp IIA . On August 21 they got to within 1500 ft of the summit before very deep and soft snow forced them to turn back.
  • 1952 Reconnaissance of Changtse via Changtse Glacier by Edmund Hillary and George Lowe and a group of Sherpas. They reached an estimated elevation of 21500 ft before turning back after running low on supplies.
  • 1982 The first ascent of Changtse was unofficially made on October 3, 1982, by Johan Taks of the Dutch Everest Expedition who were officially climbing the north side of Everest. However, Taks climbed Changtse without a permit.
  • 1982 The first official ascent of Changtse with a permit was completed 11 days later on October 14 by five members of a German expedition Udo Zehetleitner, Paul Braun, Rudolf Frick, Ludwig Hösle and Martin Engler. The ascent was made via the four kilometre-long NE Ridge from the junction of the East Rongbuk Glacier and Changtse Glacier.
  • 1983 The next ascent (but illegal) and also the first solo was made by Chilean climber Gino Casassa May 14, 1983 by the same route used by the Germans.
  • 1986 Changtse was climbed again by a large Chinese-Japanese expedition in 1986. This expedition put eight Japanese and 16 Chinese on the summit May 10 and May 11, 1986, again via the NE Ridge from the Changtse Glacier. Also included the first ascent by a woman, Mrs. Gunsung.
  • 1986 American climber Ed Webster made the first solo ascent via the SE face from the foot of the North Col on August 28, 1986. Most of this climb was done at night, taking advantage of more stable snow and ice conditions.
  • 1987 Australian climbers Rob Turner and Glen Nash reached the summit September 29, 1987 via the north face icewall (Japanese 1986 route) despite high winds.

Overview

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References

Bibliography

  • Astill, Tony. Mount Everest : The Reconnaissance 1935. Published by the Author, 2005.

References

  1. {{cite pb
  2. [http://www.highestlake.com/highest-lake-world.html#Changtse The Highest Lake in the World: 3. "Changtse Pool"]
  3. Tony Astill, ''Mount Everest: The Reconnaissance 1935'', pp. 266-67.
  4. ''Wild Issue 28'' (April 1988), pp 33-36.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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