Gasherbrum | |||||
Country Type: | Countries | ||||
Subdivision1 Type: | Regions | ||||
Parent: | Karakoram | ||||
Highest: | Gasherbrum I | ||||
Elevation: | 8080m (26,510feet) | ||||
Map: | Karakoram#Gilgit Baltistan#China Xinjiang Southern | ||||
Label: | Gasherbrum | ||||
Label Position: | top | ||||
Embedded: |
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Gasherbrum (Urdu: {{Nastaliq|گاشر برم) is a remote group of peaks situated at the northeastern end of the Baltoro Glacier in the Karakoram mountain range. The peaks are located within the border region of Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan and Xinjiang, China. The massif contains three of the world's 8,000 metre peaks (if Broad Peak is included). The highly visible face of Gasherbrum IV has gained the nickname the "Shining Wall" and this has often been claimed as the meaning of the word "Gasherbrum".[1] However the name Gasherbrum comes from "rgasha" (beautiful) + "brum" (mountain) in Balti, hence it actually means "beautiful mountain".[2]
The Gasherbrum range forms the continental divide of southern Asia; drainage to the north and east flows into the Tarim Basin, drainage to the south and west flows into the Arabian Sea.
Peak | metres | feet | Latitude (N) | Longitude (E) | Prominence (m) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
8,080 | 26,509 | 35°43′27″ | 76°41′48″ | 2,155 | ||
8,047 | 26,400 | 35°48′35″ | 76°34′06″ | 1,701 | ||
8,035 | 26,362 | 35°45′27″ | 76°39′15″ | 1,523 | ||
7,952 | 26,089 | 35°45′34″ | 76°38′31″ | 355 | ||
7,925 | 26,001 | 35°45′39″ | 76°37′00″ | 725 | ||
7,147 | 23,448 | 35°43′45″ | 76°36′48″ | 654 | ||
6,979 | 22,897 | 35°42′30″ | 76°37′54″ | 520 | ||
Gasherbrum VII | 6,955 | 22,818 | 39°44'19" | 76°36'0" | 165 | |
Gasherbrum Twins | 6,912 and 6,877 | 22,677 and 22,562 | 35°34'13" | 76°35'36" | 162 |
In 1856, Thomas George Montgomerie, a British Royal Engineers lieutenant and a member of the Great Trigonometric Survey of India, sighted a group of high peaks in the Karakoram from more than 200 km away. He named five of these peaks K1, K2, K3, K4 and K5, where the "K" denotes Karakoram. Today, K1 is known as Masherbrum, K3 as Gasherbrum IV, K4 as Gasherbrum II and K5 as Gasherbrum I. Only K2, the second highest mountain in the world, has retained Montgomerie's name. Broad Peak was thought to miss out on a K-number as it was hidden from Montgomerie's view by Masherbrum.
Mountain | altitude | first ascent | first winter ascent | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gasherbrum I | 8068 m | 1958 by Pete Schoening and A. J. Kauffman (USA) | 2012 by Adam Bielecki, (Poland)[3] | |
Broad Peak (if included in group) | 8047 m | 1957 by Marcus Schmuck, Fritz Wintersteller, Kurt Diemberger and Hermann Buhl (Austria) | 2013 by Adam Bielecki, Artur Małek, Maciej Berbeka, (Poland) | |
Gasherbrum II | 8035 m | 1956 by Fritz Moravec, S. Larch, H. Willenpart (Austria) | 2011 by Simone Moro (Italy), Denis Urubko (Kazakhstan), (United States) | |
Gasherbrum III | 7952 m | 1975 by Wanda Rutkiewicz, Alison Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz, Janusz Onyszkiewicz and (Poland) | Unclimbed in winter | |
Gasherbrum IV | 7925 m | 1958 by Walter Bonatti and Carlo Mauri (Italy) | Unclimbed in winter | |
Gasherbrum V | 7147 m | 2014 by S. Nakjong and A. Chi Young (Korea) | Unclimbed in winter | |
Gasherbrum VI | 7001 m | Unclimbed, attempted 1998 by a French group (two dead) and a Danish group (Bo Belvedere Christensen, Mads Granlien and Jan Mathorne reaching 6200 m) | Unclimbed in winter | |
Gasherbrum VII | 6755 m | 2019 by Cala Cimenti (Italy)[4] | Unclimbed in winter | |
Gasherbrum Twins | Unclimbed | Unclimbed in winter |