Rakaposhi Explained

Rakaposhi
Elevation M:7788
Elevation Ref:
Ranked 27th
Prominence M:2818
Prominence Ref:
Ranked 122nd
Range:Rakaposhi, Karakoram
Location:between Nagar Valley,Bagrote valley District Gilgit, Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan
Map:Pakistan#Gilgit Baltistan
Listing:Ultra
Map Size:260
Label Position:bottom
Coordinates:36.1425°N 74.4892°W
First Ascent:1958 by Mike Banks and Tom Patey
Easiest Route:Southwest Spur - glacier/snow/ice
Embedded:
Wikidata:yes

Rakaposhi (;[1] Urdu: {{Nastaliq|راکاپوشی) also known as Dumani is a mountain within the Karakoram range in Gilgit-Baltistan in Pakistan. It is situated in the middle of the Nagar Valley and the Bagrote Valley. The mountain is extremely broad, measuring almost 20 km from east to west. It is the only peak on earth that descends directly and without interruption for almost 6,000 meters from its summit to its base.

Geography

Rakaposhi is a mountain in the Karakoram mountain range in the Gilgit-Baltistan territory, about 1000NaN0 north of the city of Gilgit. It is the 27th-highest mountain in the world. Rakaposhi rises over the Nagar Valley.

Rakaposhi is the only mountain in the world with more than 5,000 meters height between its base camp and its summit; by contrast, all of the other tallest mountains in the world have less than 5,000 meters from base camp to the top.

The first successful recorded ascent was in 1958 by Mike Banks and Tom Patey, members of a British expedition, via the southwest Spur/Ridge route.[2]

Park

Rakaposhi is also known as Dumani ("Mother of Mist" or "Mother of Clouds").[3] The people of Nagar and Bagrot Valley have dedicated the Rakaposhi range mountain area as a community park. The minister for the northern areas inaugurated the park. The Rakaposhi mountain range is the home of endangered species such as Marco Polo sheep, snow leopard, brown bear, and wolves.

Notable features

Rakaposhi is notable for its exceptional rise over local terrain. On the north, it rises 5900m (19,400feet) in only an 11.2 km (7 mi) horizontal distance from the Hunza River. There are views of Rakaposhi from the Karakoram Highway on the route through Nagar. A tourist spot in the town of Ghulmet (located in the Hunza Valley) called "Zero Point of Rakaposhi" is the closest view point of the mountain.

Rakaposhi is the only mountain in the world which rises straight from beautifully cultivated fields to the height of 25,550 feet. From many places this wonderful spectacle can be viewed right from the base to the top.[4]

Time line

Climbing routes

The routes with successful summits so far have been (see the timeline as well):

Attempts have also been made from the east side Bagrot Valley Hinearcha Glacier, the East Ridge, and the North Face.

See also

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rakaposhi : Climbing, Hiking & Mountaineering : SummitPost . 2023-02-17 . www.summitpost.org.
  2. Rakaposhi Climbed . Himalayan Journal. 1958. Capt. Mike . Banks . 21. 55–59 . 6 April 2024 .
  3. Web site: Rakaposhi . 2023-02-17 . PeakVisor . en.
  4. Karakuram Hunza: The Land of Just Enough. S. Shahid Hamid. Karachi, 1979, p. 10.
  5. Reconnaissances of Rakaposhi and the Kunyang Glacier . Himalayan Journal. 1939. R. Campbell . Secord . Vyvyan . M. . 11 . 156–164 . 6 April 2024 .
  6. To the Monk’s Head on Rakaposhi . Himalayan Journal. 1956. Roger . Chorley . 19 . 109–119 . 6 April 2024 .
  7. Asia, Pakistan, Rakaposhi . American Alpine Journal. 0065-6925 . 1955. 9 . 29 . 180–181 . 6 April 2024 .
  8. Rakaposhi – The North-west Ridge . Himalayan Journal. 1965. Joss P. O’F. . Lynam . 26 . 70–81 . 6 April 2024 .
  9. Herrligkoffer . Karl . Rakaposhi (7788 m.) 1973 . Himalayan Journal . 33. 156–158 . 1975 . 18 February 2024 .
  10. Kodama . Shigeru . Rakaposhi from the north . 185–188 . Alpine Journal . 86 . 330 . 1981 . 18 February 2024 .
  11. The Ascent of Rakaposhi . Alpine Journal. 1958. Leut. Commander F.R.. Brooke . 63 . 297 . 159–168 . 6 April 2024 .