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Nanga Parbat Peak
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Standing remote and aloof, at the
western edge, Nanga Parbat which means "the Naked Mountain",
describes the peak better than anything else. Its sharp ridges can hold
little snow and this unclad appearance is most unusual in zones where
all other mountains are wrapped in white snow. It is considered the
ninth highest mountain in the world, which covers parts of Gilgit,
Baldistan, Korakoram range and Pakistan. |
The Nanga Parbat massif is the western corner pillar of the Himalayas.
It is an isolated range of peaks just springing up from nothing, and is
surrounded by the rivers Indus and Astore. Nanga Parbat or "Nanga
Parvata" means the naked mountain. Its original and appropriate
name, however, is Diamir the king of the mountains. Nanga Parbat (main peak) has a height of 8126 meters/26,660 ft. It has three vast faces. The Rakhiot (Rae Kot) face is dominated by the north and south silver crags and silver plateau; the Diamir face is rocky in the beginning. It converts itself into ice fields around Nanga Parbat peak. The Rupal face is the highest precipice in the world. Reinhold Messner, a living legend in mountaineering from Italy, says that "every one who has ever stood at the foot of this face (4500 meters) up above the 'Tap Alpe', studied it or flown over it, could not help but have been amazed by its sheer size; it has become known as the highest rock and ice wall in the world!". The Nanga Parbat peak was discovered in the nineteenth century by Europeans. The Schlagintweit brothers, who hailed from Munich (Germany) came in 1854 to Himalayas and drew a panoramic view which is the first known picture of Nanga Parbat. Nanga
Parbat - The Murder MountainNanga Parbat is much favored by most climbers, but it were the Germans, who gave it the name, Murder Mountain. The explorer, Albert Frederick Mummery, was the first to venture on this mountain. Daunting and wild, bearing the onslaught of gnawing wind and torrential rain during the monsoons, Nanga Parbat is full of the dangers of the unknown. The Sherpas, localities of the Himalayan region calls Nanga Parbat, "the man-eater" or the 'Mountain of the Devil' as no other peak has claimed lives with such sickening regularity and the list of tragedies is heart-wrenching. |
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