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Nemjung

Mountain in Nepal


Summary

Mountain in Nepal

FieldValue
nameNemjung
photoNemjung Gipfel 7140 Meter.jpg
elevation_m7140
elevation_ref
prominence_m1920
prominence_ref
rangeHimalayas
listing
locationManang District,
Gandaki Zone,
North central Nepal
mapNepal
map_captionLocation in Nepal
label_positionright
coordinates
coordinates_ref
first_ascent1983 by Nepal and Hirosaki University HIMLUNG HIMAL Joint Expedition
easiest_routerock/snow/ice climb

Gandaki Zone, North central Nepal Wataru Saito, Makito Minami, Ken Takahashi (Japanese), Kirkin Lama (Nepalese) Nemjung or Nimjung is a mountain in the Himalayas of Nepal. It is located approximately 150 km northwest of the Nepalese capital Kathmandu and about 25 km northwest of the eight-thousander, Manaslu. Its summit has an elevation of 7140 m. This mountain was once called Himlung Himal.

In the 1990s, a few years after the first ascent in 1983, when demarcating the border with China, the Nepalese government changed the traditional name of Himlung Himal to another mountain about 4 kilometres north. The peak between them is properly called Himjung. It is the highest among the three peaks of Nemjung (east), Himjung (centre) and Himlung Himal range (west).

Nemjung was first climbed via the east ridge on October 27, 1983 by a Joint expedition from Nepal and the Hirosaki University Alpine Club led by Junji Kurotaki. Previous attempts had been made in 1963 by a Japanese expedition from the Den Den Kyushu Alpine Club led by Hisachika Zengyou; in 1994 by a British expedition; and in 2009 by a French team. On October 30, 2009 a Japanese team led by Osamu Tanabe summitted Nemjung via its previously unclimbed west face and west ridge.

References

References

  1. "High Asia II: Himalaya of Nepal, Bhutan, Sikkim and adjoining region of Tibet". Peaklist.org.
  2. Hirata, Osamn. (2003). "WINTER EXPEDITION TO NEMJUNG". [[Himalayan Journal]].
  3. Hori, Hiroshi. (1984). "First Ascent of Himlung Himal". The Journal of the Japanese Alpine Club SANGAKU.
  4. "French Climb South Spur of Nemjung".
  5. (21 January 2010). "Nemjung Climbed from the West".
  6. "Japanese Climb West Face of Nemjung".
  7. (2010). "Nemjung (7,140m), West-Northwest Face and Upper West Ridge".
Wikipedia Source

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