Gimmigela Chuli Explained

Gimmigela Chuli
Other Name:The Twins
Elevation M:7350
Elevation Ref:[1]
Prominence M:432
Parent Peak:Kangchenjunga
Location:India–Nepal border
Range:Kangchenjunga Himal, Himalayas
Map:Nepal
Coordinates:27.7333°N 97°W
First Ascent:1995 by Taroh Tanigawa, Koji Nagakubo and Yuichi Yoshida
Easiest Route:glacier/snow/ice climb

Gimmigela Chuli, or The Twins, are two-peak mountains in the Himalayas, located on the border between Taplejung, Mechi, Nepal and Sikkim, India.

Location

It has an elevation of 7350m (24,110feet) above sea level and prominence is at . It is situated approximately 4.2km (02.6miles) NNE from Kangchenjunga.

The mountain has a subpeak, Gimmigela Chuli II metres; prominence is at .[2] This subpeak, sometimes referred to as "Gimmigela's Sister", lies entirely within India. Together the two peaks, Gimmigela I and Gimmigela II, are known as "The Twins".

Climbing history

A Japanese expedition attempted to reach the west (main) summit in 1993 via the east ridge from Sikkim, ending on 18 October 1993 after the death of expedition leader Masanori Sato. The team had achieved the first ascent of Gimmigela II and were on the summit ridge connecting the two peaks in an attempt to summit Gimmigela I when Sato fell 35 meters into a hidden crevasse. Despite the efforts of the other team members, his body was not recovered and the expedition was terminated.[3]

One year later in October 1994, Taroh Tanigawa, Koji Nagakubo and Yuichi Yoshida, members of the failed attempt in 1993, achieved the first ascent of Gimmigela I.[4] [5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. 18690. Gimmigela, India/Nepal. 2014-05-07.
  2. 35642. Gimmigela II, India. 2014-05-07.
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=VdEPD-6OitEC&dq=aaj+gimmigela+first+ascent&pg=PA204 "Gimmigela first ascent"
  4. http://www.jac.or.jp/english/kiroku/1995/twin95_e.htm "The First successful ascent to the Twins: Mt. Gimmigela"
  5. http://publications.americanalpineclub.org/articles/13201214239/Gimmigela-Chuli-East-Northwest-Face "Gimmigela Chuli East, Northeast Face"