- Source: Gyachung Kang
Gyachung Kang (Nepali: ग्याचुङ्काङ, Gyāchung Kāng; Chinese: 格重康峰; pinyin: Géchóngkāng Fēng) is a mountain in the Mahalangur Himal section of the Himalayas and is the highest peak between Cho Oyu (8,201 m) and Mount Everest (8,848 m). It lies on the border between Nepal and China. As the 15th highest peak in the world, it is also the co highest peak (with Gasherbrum III) that is not an eight-thousander; hence, it is far less well-known than the lowest of the eight-thousanders, which are only about 100 m (328 ft) higher. The peak's lack of significant prominence (700 m) also contributes to its relative obscurity.
Climbing history
The mountain was first climbed on April 10, 1964, by Y. Kato, K. Sakaizawa, Pasang Phutar, K. Machida and K. Yasuhisa.
The north face was first climbed in 1999 by a Slovene expedition and was repeated by Yasushi Yamanoi in 2002.
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References
Further reading
Dahlman, Chris (2021). This Is Gyachung: The Story of Seiko's First Professional Mountaineer's Watch.
External links
Slovene Gyachung Kang '99 Expedition at MountainZone.com
Costly success on Gyachung Kang
Report on the first ascent 1964 by Yukihiko Kato (in Japanese)
Gyachung Kang Virtual Aerial Video
New research in This Is Gyachung proves that Seiko's first professional watch came earlier than we had previously thought. (hodinkee.com)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Pegunungan Himalaya
- Daftar puncak gunung tertinggi di dunia
- Daftar gunung menurut ketinggian
- Gyachung Kang
- Yalung Kang
- Tenzing Peak
- Hillary Peak
- Chomo Lonzo
- Mount Everest
- Nuptse
- List of highest mountains on Earth
- List of mountains in Nepal
- Gangkhar Puensum