'Dhaulagiri' (धौलागिरी) is the seventh highest
mountain in the world. It forms the eastern anchor of the 'Dhaulagiri Himal', a
subrange of the
Himalaya in the
Dhawalagiri Zone of north central
Nepal. It lies northwest of
Pokhara, an important regional town and tourist center. Across the deep gorge of the
Kali Gandaki to the east lies the
Annapurna Himal, home to Annapurna I, one of the other
eight-thousanders. Dhaulagiri means "White Mountain".
__NOTOC__
Notable Features
After its discovery in
1808 by the western world, Dhaulagiri was
thought to be the highest mountain in the world. This lasted for 30 years before Dhaulagiri's place was taken by
Kangchenjunga.
In terms of rise above local terrain, Dhaulagiri is, in fact, almost unparalleled in the world. For example, it rises 7000m over the Kali Gandaki gorge to the southeast in about 30km of horizontal distance. The Kali Gandaki is especially dramatic since Dhaulagiri and Annapurna both stand near the river, giving a unique example of two
Eight-thousanders facing each other over a deep valley.
The South and West faces of Dhaulagiri both feature massive drops; each rises over 4000 meters from its base, and each has been the site of epic climbs (see the Timeline).
Among the subsidiary peaks in the range, Gurja Himal also boasts a large, precipitous drop on its south face.
Climbing History
Dhaulagiri was first climbed on
May 13,
1960 by
Kurt Diemberger,
Peter Diener, Ernst Forrer, Albin Schelbert, Nyima Dorji and Nawang Dorji, members of a Swiss/Austrian expedition.
The expedition leader was Max Eiselin; they used the Northeast Ridge route which had been reconnoitered one year earlier by an Austrian expedition led by
Fritz Moravec.
This was also the first Himalayan climb supported by a fixed-wing aircraft.
The aircraft, a
Pilatus PC-6, crashed during the approach and was later abandoned on the mountain.
The vast majority of ascents to date have been via the first ascent route,
which is the "Normal Route" on the mountain. However ascents have been made from almost every direction.

Dhaulagiri Range from Poon Hill
Partial Timeline
(All items are about Dhaulagiri I except where noted.)
★
1950 The peak is reconnoitered by the French, led by
Maurice Herzog; however they do not see a feasible route and switch their objective to Annapurna, where they succeed in making the first ascent of an
8000 m peak.
★
1953-
1958 Five expeditions attempt the North Face, or "Pear Buttress", route.
★
1954 J. O. M. Roberts and
Sherpa Ang Nyima climb Putha Hiunchuli (the first successful major summit ascent in the range).
★
1959 An Austrian expedition led by
Fritz Moravec makes the first attempt on the Northeast Ridge, which will become the first ascent route the following year.
★
1960 The first ascent, detailed above.
★
1969 Americans, led by Boyd Everett, attempt the Southeast Ridge; seven team members, including Everett, are killed.
★
1970 The second ascent of Dhaulagiri, via the first-ascent route, by a Japanese expedition led by Tokufu Ohta and Shoji Imanari. Tetsuji Kawada and Lhakpa Tenzing reach the summit on October 20.
[1]
★
1973 An American team led by James Morrissey makes the third ascent of Dhaulagiri, via the first ascent route (Northeast Ridge). Summit team: John Roskelley, Louis Reichardt, Nawang Samden.
★
1975 A Japanese team led by Takashi Amemiya attempts the Southwest Ridge (also known as the South Pillar). Six people are killed in an avalanche.
★
1976 An Italian expedition makes the fourth ascent of the peak.
★
1977 An international team led by Reinhold Messner attempts the South Face.
★
1978, Spring: Amemiya returns with an expedition which puts five members on the summit via the Southwest Ridge; this is the first ascent not to use the Northeast Ridge. One team member is killed during the ascent.
★
1978, Autumn: Seiko Tanaka of Japan leads an expedition which successfully climbs the very difficult Southeast Ridge. Four team members are killed during the ascent. Also, a French team attempts the Southwest Buttress (also called the South Buttress), but reaches only 7200m.
★
1979 A Japanese expedition climbs Dhaulagiri II via the east ridge and Dhaulagiri V via the south ridge. They place camps on the summits of both peaks, and members of the expedition make traverses along the 4 km (2.4 mi) intervening ridge (which is everywhere above 7,150 m) in both directions. This expedition was also notable for being led by a woman, Michiko Takahashi.
★
1981 A Yugoslavian team reach 7,950 m after putting up the first route on the true South Face of the mountain, on the right side, connecting with the Southeast Ridge. They climbed in alpine style, but suffered four days of open bivouacs and six days without food before returning. Also, Hironobu Kamuro of Japan reaches the summit alone, via the normal route.
★
1984 Three members of the Czechoslovakian expedition (J. Simon, K. Jakes, J. Stejskal) reached the summit via the monumental west face of the mountain. J. Simon died during the descent.
★
1985 A Polish expedition including the famed
Jerzy Kukuczka climbs Dhaulagiri, via the standard route, in winter: they reach the summit on January 21.
★
1986 A mostly Polish expedition puts up the second South Face route, on the left side of the face, connecting with the Southwest Ridge route. They go above 7500 m but do not reach the summit.
★
1993 A Russian-British team puts up the Direct North Face Route.
★
1998 On
May 16,
Chantal Mauduit, an accomplished French climber, dies in an avalanche while attempting Dhaulagiri.
★
1999 On
October 24 Ginette Harrison, an accomplished British climber, dies in an avalanche while attempting Dhaulagiri. Days later, the Slovenian
Tomaz Humar climbs the huge, steep South Face solo, but does not reach the true summit of the peak.
Other peaks in the Dhaulagiri Himal
The Dhaulagiri Himal contains the following named peaks over 7,000 m (22,966 ft)
[2]
World Rank†| Mountain | Height (m) | Height (ft) | Coordinates | Prominence (m) | First ascent |
|---|
| 7 | Dhaulagiri I | 8,167 | 26,795 | | 3,357 | 1960 |
| 30 | Dhaulagiri II | 7,751 | 25,430 | | 2,396 | 1971 |
| | Dhaulagiri III | 7,715 | 25,311 | | 135 | 1973 |
| | Dhaulagiri IV | 7,661 | 25,135 | | 469 | 1969 |
| | Dhaulagiri V | 7,618 | 24,992 | | 340 | 1975 |
| 72 | Churen Himal (Main) | 7,385 | 24,229 | | 600 | unknown‡ |
| | Churen Himal (East) | 7,371 | 24,229 | | 150 | 1970 |
| | Churen Himal (West) | 7,371 | 24,183 | | 70 | 1970 |
| | Dhaulagiri VI | 7,268 | 23,845 | | 485 | 1970 |
| 95 | Putha Hiunchuli | 7,246 | 23,773 | | 1,151 | 1954 |
| | Gurja Himal | 7,193 | 23,599 | | 500 | 1969 |
†In this list, only peaks above 7,200 m with more than 500 m (1,640 ft) of
topographic prominence are
ranked.
‡ The status of the three peaks of Churen Himal is unclear, and sources differ on their heights.
[3][4] The coordinates, heights and prominence values above are derived from the Finnmap.
The first ascent data is from Neate
, but it is unclear if the first ascent of Churen Himal East was actually an ascent of the highest of the three peaks, as Neate lists Churen Himal Central as a 7,320 m subpeak of Churen Himal East.
Most of these peaks lie along one high east-west ridge, lying to the west-northwest of Dhaulagiri I and separated from it by a deep col (the French col). In order from west to east, they are: Putha Hiunchuli, Churen Himal, D VI, D IV, D V, D III, D II. Gurja Himal lies south of Dhaulagiri VI, away from the main ridge.
Footnotes
1. ''American Alpine Journal'', 1971, p. 438.
2. Jill Neate, ''High Asia: An Illustrated History of the 7,000 Metre Peaks'', Mountaineers Books, 1990, ISBN 0-89886-238-8
3. H. Adams Carter, "Classification of the Himalaya," ''American Alpine Journal'', 1985.
4. Finnmap (topographic map) of Dhaulagiri Himal
References
★ Koichiro Ohmori, ''Over the Himalaya''. Cloudcap/The Mountaineers, 1994.
★ ''American Alpine Journal'', 1974, 1976, 1977, 1979, 1986, 1987, 1994, 1999, 2000.
★
Himalayan Index
External links
★
Dhaulagiri on Peakware
★
Dhaulagiri on summitpost.org (Detailed description of trekking and of first ascent)
★
Himalayan Index