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An open crevasse.
'Mountaineering' is the
sport,
hobby or
profession of
walking,
hiking,
trekking and
climbing up
mountains. It is also sometimes known as 'alpinism', particularly in Europe. While it began as an all-out attempt to reach the highest point of unclimbed mountains, it has branched into specializations addressing different aspects of mountains & may now be said to consist of three aspects: rock-craft, snow-craft and skiing, depending on whether the route chosen is over
rock,
snow or
ice. All require great athletic and technical ability, and experience is also a very important part of the matter.
Technique
Snow
While certain compacted snow conditions allow mountaineers to progress on foot, typically some form of mechanical device is required to travel efficiently over snow & ice.
Snowshoes can be used to walk through deep snow approaching the mountain or on lesser slopes up the mountain.
Skis can be used everywhere snowshoes can and also in steeper, more side-hilled landscapes although it takes more practice to develop sufficiently strong skiing skills for difficult terrain. Skis can also be a form of the sport by itself, called
Ski Mountaineering.
Crampons may be used on hard snow (neve) and ice to provide additional traction & allow very steep ascents.

Climbers descending a ridge.
Glaciers
When traveling over
glaciers,
crevasses pose a grave danger. These giant cracks in the ice are not always visible as snow can be blown and freeze over the top to make a ''snowbridge''. At times snowbridges can be as thin as a few inches. Climbers use a system of ropes to protect themselves from such hazards. Basic gear for glacier travel includes
crampons and
ice axes. Teams of two to five climbers tie into a rope equally spaced. If a climber begins to fall the other members of the team perform a
self-arrest to stop the fall. The other members of the team enact a
crevasse rescue to pull the fallen climber from the crevasse.
Ice
Multiple methods are used to safely travel over ice. If the terrain is steep but not vertical
protection in the form of
pickets or ice screws can be driven into the snow or ice and attached to the rope by the lead climber. Each climber on the team must clip past the anchor, and the last climber picks up the picket. This allows for safety should the entire team be taken off their feet. This technique is known as Simul-climbing.
If the terrain becomes vertical then standard
ice climbing techniques are used.

Ice climbing
Shelter
Climbers use a few different forms of shelter depending on the situation and conditions. Shelter is a very important aspect of safety for the climber as the weather in the mountains is very unpredictable. Tall mountains require many days of camping on the mountain.
Hut
The European alpine regions, in particular, have a network of mountain huts (called ‘refuges’ in France and ‘cabanes’ in Switzerland). Such huts exist at many different heights, including in the high mountains themselves – in extremely remote areas bivouac shelters may have been provided. The mountain huts are of varying size and quality but each is typically centred on a communal dining room and have dormitories equipped with mattresses, blankets or duvets, and pillows – guests are expected to bring and to use their own sleeping bag liner. The facilities are usually rudimentary but, given their locations, huts offer vital shelter, make routes more widely accessible (by allowing journeys to be broken and reducing the weight of equipment needing to be carried), and offer good value. In Europe, all huts are staffed during the summer (mid-June to mid-September) and some are staffed in the spring (mid-March to mid-May). Elsewhere, huts may also be open in the fall. Huts also may have a part that is always open, but unmanned, a so-called winter hut. When open and manned, the huts are generally run by full-time employees, but some are staffed on a voluntary basis by members of Alpine clubs (such as Club Alpine Suisse and Club Alpine France). The manager of the hut, termed a guardian or warden in Europe, will usually also sell refreshments and meals – both to those visiting only for the day and to those staying overnight. The offering is surprisingly wide – given that most supplies, often including fresh water, must be flown in by helicopter – and may include glucose-based snacks (such as Mars and Snickers bars) on which climbers and walkers wish to stock up, cakes and pastries made at the hut, a variety of hot and cold drinks (including beer and wine), and high carbohydrate dinners in the evenings. Not all huts do offer a catered service, though, and visitors may need to provide for themselves. Some huts offer facilities for both, enabling visitors wishing to keep costs down to bring their own food and cooking equipment and to cater using the facilities provided. Booking for overnight stays at huts is deemed obligatory, and in many cases is essential as some popular huts – even with over 100 bed spaces - may well be full during good weather and at weekends. Once made, the cancellation of a reservation should be advised to the hut as a matter of courtesy – and, indeed, potentially of safety, as many huts keep a record of where climbers and walkers state they planned to walk to next. Most huts are contactable by telephone and most take credit cards as a means of payment for the service they provide.
Bivy
A bivy or bivouac is simply getting a sleeping bag and
Bivouac sack and laying down to sleep. Many times small half sheltered areas like cracks in rocks or simply a trench dug in the snow are used to provide a basic means of shelter as well. This technique is performed by most people only in cases of emergency, however in good weather this can be pleasant. Some climbers steadfastly committed to Alpine Style climbing plan on bivying in order to save the weight of a tent when snow conditions are not suitable for a snow cave.
Tent
Tents are the most common form of shelter used on the mountain. A four season tent is required for any camp high in the mountains. Many climbers do not use tents at high altitudes unless the snow conditions do not allow for snow caving. One of the downsides to tenting is that storm winds can be very unnerving and can cause the tent to collapse, however modern mountaineering tents are usually tested for wind speeds up to 125mph. Even so, very intense flapping of the tent fabric can hinder sleep and raise doubts about the security of the shelter in windy conditions.
Snow cave
Snow caves are the preferred way for many climbers to shelter high on the mountain. Unlike tents snow caves are silent and are actually much warmer than a tent. A correctly made snow cave will hover around freezing, which relative to outside temperatures can be very warm.
Igloos are used by some climbers, but are deceptively difficult to build and require specific snow conditions.
Hazards
The craft of climbing has been developed to avoid three main types of danger: the danger of things falling on the climber (objective danger), the danger of the climber falling and inclement weather. The things that may fall include rocks, ice, snow, other climbers or their gear; the mountaineer may fall from rocks, ice or snow, or into a crevasse. In all, there are eight chief dangers: falling rocks, falling ice, snow-avalanches, falls,the climber falling, falls from ice slopes, falls down snow slopes, falls into crevasses and dangers from weather. To select and follow a route using one's skills and experience to mitigate these dangers is to exercise the climber's craft.
Falling rocks

Rocky mountains tend to be hazardous.
Every rock mountain is slowly disintegrating due to
erosion, the process being especially rapid above the snow-line. Rock faces are constantly swept by falling stones, which are generally possible to dodge. Falling rocks tend to form furrows in a mountain face, and these furrows (
couloirs) have to be ascended with caution, their sides often being safe when the middle is stoneswept. Rocks fall more frequently on some days than on others, according to the recent weather. Ice formed during the night may temporarily bind rocks to the face but warmth of the day or direct sun exposure may easily dislodge these rocks. Local experience is a valuable help on determining typical rockfall on such routes.
The direction of the dip of rock strata often determines the degree of danger on a particular face; the character of the rock must also be considered. Where stones fall frequently debris will be found below, whilst on snow slopes falling stones cut furrows visible from a great distance. In planning an ascent of a new peak mountaineers must look for such traces. When falling stones get mixed in considerable quantity with slushy snow or water a mud avalanche is formed (common in the
Himalaya). It is vital to avoid
camping in their possible line of fall.
Falling ice
The places where ice may fall can always be determined beforehand. It falls in the broken parts of glaciers (seracs) and from overhanging cornices formed on the crests of narrow ridges. Large icicles are often formed on steep rock faces, and these fall frequently in fine weather following cold and stormy days. They have to be avoided like falling stones.
Seracs are slow in formation, and slow in arriving (by glacier motion) at a condition of unstable equilibrium. They generally fall in or just after the hottest part of the day, and their debris seldom goes far. A skillful and experienced ice-man will usually devise a safe route through a most intricate ice-fall, but such places should be avoided in the afternoon of a hot day. Hanging glaciers (i.e. glaciers perched on steep slopes) often discharge themselves over steep rock-faces, the snout breaking off at intervals. They can always be detected by their debris below. Their track should be avoided.
Falls from rocks
The skill of a
rock climber is shown by one's choice of handhold and foothold, and his adhesion to those one has chosen. Much depends on a correct estimate of the firmness of the rock where weight is to be thrown upon it. Many loose rocks are quite firm enough to bear a person's weight, but experience is needed to know which can be trusted, and skill is required in transferring the weight to them without jerking. On rotten rocks the rope must be handled with special care, lest it should start loose stones on to the heads of those below. Similar care must be given to handholds and footholds, for the same reason. When a horizontal traverse has to be made across very difficult rocks, a dangerous situation may arise unless at both ends of the traverse there be firm positions. Mutual assistance on hard rocks takes all manner of forms: two, or even three, people climbing on one another's shoulders, or using an
ice axe propped up by others for a foothold. The great principle is that of co-operation, all the members of the party climbing with reference to the others, and not as independent units; each when moving must know what the climber in front and the one behind are doing. After bad weather steep rocks are often found covered with a veneer of ice (
verglas), which may even render them inaccessible.
Crampons are useful on such occasions.
Avalanches
Main articles: Avalanche
The
avalanche is the most underestimated danger in the mountains. People generally think that they will be able to recognize the hazards and survive being caught. The truth is a somewhat different story. Every year, 120 - 150 people die in small avalanches in the Alps alone. The vast majority are reasonably experienced male skiers aged 20-35 but also include ski instructors and guides. There is always a lot of pressure to risk a snow crossing. Turning back takes a lot of extra time and effort, supreme leadership, and most importantly there seldom is an avalanche to prove the right decision was made. Making the decision to turn around is especially hard if others are crossing the slope, but any next person could become the trigger.
There are many types of avalanche, but two types are of the most concern:
#The slab avalanche: This type of avalanche occurs when a plate of snow breaks loose and starts sliding down; these are the largest and most dangerous.
##Hard slab avalanche - formed by hard-packed snow in a cohesive slab. The slab will not break up easily as it slides down the hill, resulting in large blocks tumbling down the mountain.
##Soft slab avalanche - formed again by a cohesive layer of snow bonded together, the slab tends to break up more easily.
#The loose snow avalanche: This type of avalanche is triggered by a small amount of moving snow that accumulates into a big slide. Also known as a "wet slide or point release" avalanche. This type of avalanche is deceptively dangerous as it can still knock a climber or skier off their feet and bury them, or sweep them over a cliff into a terrain trap.
Dangerous slides are most likely to occur on the same slopes preferred by many skiers: long and wide open, few trees or large rocks, 30 to 45 degrees of angle, large load of fresh snow, soon after a big storm, on a slope 'lee to the storm'. Solar radiation can trigger slides as well. These will typically be a point release or wet slough type of avalanche. The added weight of the wet slide can trigger a slab avalanche. Ninety percent of reported victims are caught in avalanches triggered by themselves or others in their group.
When going off-piste or traveling in alpine terrain, parties have a moral responsibility to always carry:
#
avalanche beacon
#probe
#shovel (retrieving victims with a shovel instead of your hands is five times faster)
and to have had avalanche training! Paradoxically, expert skiers who have avalanche training make up a large percentage of avalanche fatalities; perhaps because they are the ones more likely to ski in areas prone to avalanches, and certainly because most people do not practice enough with their equipment to be truly fast & efficient rescuers.
Even with proper rescue equipment and training, there is a one-in-five chance of dying if caught in a significant avalanche, and only a 50/50 chance of being found alive if buried more than a few minutes. The best solution is to learn how to avoid risky conditions.
Ice slopes

Mountaineers descending mixed rock, snow and ice slope in winter
High Tatras.
For travel on slopes consisting of ice or hard snow,
crampons are a standard part of a mountaineer's equipment. While step-cutting can sometimes be used on snow slopes of moderate angle, this can be a slow and tiring process, which does not provide the higher security of crampons. However, in soft snow or powder, crampons are easily hampered by balling of snow which reduce their effectiveness. In either case, an
ice axe not only assists with balance but provides the climber with the possibility of self-arrest in case of a slip or fall. On a true ice slope however, an ice axe is rarely able to effect a self-arrest. As an additional safety precaution on steep ice slopes, the climbing rope is attached to
ice screws buried into the ice.
True ice slopes are rare in
Europe, though common in mountains located in the tropics, where newly-fallen snow quickly thaws on the surface and becomes sodden below, so that the next night's frost turns the whole mass into a sheet of semi-solid ice.
Snow slopes
Snow slopes are very common, and usually easy to ascend. At the foot of a snow or ice slope is generally a big crevasse, called a
bergschrund, where the final slope of the mountain rises from a snow-field or glacier. Such bergschrunds are generally too wide to be stepped across, and must be crossed by a snow bridge, which needs careful testing and a painstaking use of the rope. A steep snow slope in bad condition may be dangerous, as the whole body of snow may start as an avalanche. Such slopes are less dangerous if ascended directly than obliquely, for an oblique or horizontal track cuts them across and facilitates movement of the mass. New snow lying on ice is especially dangerous. Experience is needed for deciding on the advisability of advancing over snow in doubtful condition. Snow on rocks is usually rotten unless it is thick; snow on snow is likely to be sound. A day or two of fine weather will usually bring new snow into sound condition. Snow cannot lie at a very steep angle, though it often deceives the eye as to its slope. Snow slopes seldom exceed 40°. Ice slopes may be much steeper. Snow slopes in early morning are usually hard and safe, but the same in the afternoon are quite soft and possibly dangerous; hence the advantage of an early start.
Crevasses
Crevasses are the slits or deep chasms formed in the substance of a glacier as it passes over an uneven bed. They may be open or hidden. In the lower part of a glacier the crevasses are open. Above the snow-line they are frequently hidden by arched-over accumulations of winter snow. The detection of hidden crevasses requires care and experience. After a fresh fall of snow they can only be detected by sounding with the pole of the ice axe, or by looking to right and left where the open extension of a partially hidden crevasse may be obvious. The safeguard against accident is the rope, and no one should ever cross a snow-covered glacier unless roped to one, or even better to two companions. Anyone venturing onto crevasses should be trained in
crevasse rescue.
Weather
The primary dangers caused by bad weather centre around the changes it causes in snow and rock conditions, making movement suddenly much more arduous and hazardous than under normal circumstances.

Poor visibility in blizzard conditions.
Whiteouts make it difficult to retrace a route while rain may prevent taking the easiest line only determined as such under dry conditions. In a storm the mountaineer who uses a
compass for guidance has a great advantage over a merely empirical observer. In large snow-fields it is, of course, easier to go wrong than on rocks, but intelligence and experience are the best guides in safely navigating objective hazards.
Summer
thunderstorms may produce intense
lightning. If a climber happens to be standing on or near the summit, they risk being struck. There are many cases where people have been struck by lightning while climbing mountains. In most mountainous regions, local storms develop by late morning and early afternoon. Many climbers will get an "alpine start"; that is before or by first light so as to be on the way down when storms are intensifying in activity and lightning and other weather hazards are a distinct threat to safety.
Altitude
Rapid ascent can lead to
altitude sickness. The best treatment is to descend immediately. The climber's motto at high altitude is "climb high, sleep low", referring to the regimen of climbing higher to acclimatize but returning to lower elevation to sleep. In the South American Andes, the chewing of
coca leaves has been traditionally used to treat altitude sickness symptoms.
Common symptoms of altitude sickness include severe headache, sleep problems, nausea, lack of appetite, lethargy and body ache. Mountain sickness may progress to HACE (
High Altitude Cerebral Edema) and HAPE (
High Altitude Pulmonary Edema), both of which can be fatal within 24 hours.
In high mountains, atmospheric pressure is lower and this means that less oxygen is available to breathe. This is the underlying cause of altitude sickness. Everyone needs to acclimatize, even exceptional mountaineers that have been to high altitude before. Generally speaking, mountaineers start using bottled oxygen when they climb above 7,000 m. Exceptional mountaineers have climbed
8000-metre peaks (including
Everest) without oxygen, almost always with a carefully planned program of acclimatization.
In 2005, researcher and mountaineer John Semple established that above-average ozone concentrations on the
Tibetan plateau may pose an additional risk to climbers.
[Mountainous plateau creates ozone 'halo' around Tibet]
Locations
Mountaineering has become a popular sport throughout the world. In Europe the sport largely originated in the
Alps, and is still immensely popular there. Other notable mountain ranges frequented by climbers include the
Caucasus, the
Pyrenees and the
Tatra mountains. In North America climbers frequent the
Rockies and Sierra Nevada of California, the
Cascades of Washington and the high peaks of
Alaska.
There has been a long tradition of climbers going on expeditions to the
Greater Ranges, a term generally used for the
Andes and the high peaks of Asia including the
Himalaya,
Pamirs and
Tien Shan. In the past this was often on exploratory trips or to make first ascents. With the advent of cheaper long-haul air travel mountaineering holidays in the Greater Ranges are now undertaken much more frequently and ascents of even
Everest and
Vinson Massif (the highest mountain in
Antarctica) are offered as a "package holiday".
Other popular mountaineering areas of more local interest include the
Southern Alps of
New Zealand, the
Japanese Alps the
Scottish Highlands and the mountains of
Scandinavia.
History
★ Though it is unknown whether his intention was to reach a summit,
Ötzi ascended at least 3,000 m in the Alps about 5,300 years ago. His remains were found at that altitude, preserved in a glacier.
★ The first recorded mountain ascent in the
Common Era is Roman Emperor
Hadrian's ascent of
Etna (3,350 m) to see the sun rise in
121.
★
Peter III of Aragon climbed
Canigou in the
Pyrenees in the last quarter of the 13th century.
★ The first ascent of the
Popocatépetl (5,426 m in
Mexico) was reported in 1289 by members of a local
tribe (Tecanuapas)
★
Jean Buridan climbed
Mont Ventoux around 1316.
[1]
★ The Italian poet
Petrarch wrote that on
April 26,
1336 he, together with his brother and two servants, climbed to the top of
Mont Ventoux (1,909 m). His
account of the trip was composed later as a letter to his friend
Dionigi di Borgo San Sepolcro.
[2]
★ The
Rochemelon (3,538 m) in the Italian
Alps was climbed in
1358.
★ In the late 1400s and early 1500s ascents were made of numerous high peaks in the
Andes, for religious purposes by the citizens of the
Inca Empire and their subjects. They constructed platforms, houses and altars on many summits and carried out sacrifices, including
human sacrifices. The highest peak they are known for certain to have climbed is
Llullaillaco (6,739 m). They may also have ascended the highest peak in the Andes,
Aconcagua (6,962 m) as a sacrifice victim has been found at over 5,000 m on this peak.
★ In 1492 the ascent of
Mont Aiguille was made by order of
Charles VIII of France. The
Humanists of the 16th century adopted a new attitude towards mountains, but the disturbed state of Europe nipped in the bud the nascent mountaineering of the Zurich school.
★
Leonardo da Vinci climbed to a snow-field in the neighborhood of the
Val Sesia and made scientific observations.
★ In
1642 Darby Field made the first recorded ascent of
Mount Washington, then known as Agiocochook, in
New Hampshire.
★
Konrad Gesner and
Josias Simler of
Zurich visited and described mountains, and made regular ascents. The use of
ice axe and rope were locally invented at this time. No mountain expeditions of note are recorded in the 17th century.
★
Richard Pococke and
William Windham's historic visit to
Chamonix was made in 1741, and set the trend for visiting
glaciers.
★ In 1744 the
Titus was climbed, the first true ascent of a snow-mountain.
★ The first attempt to ascend
Mont Blanc was made in 1775 by a party of natives. In 1786 Dr
Michel Paccard and
Jacques Balmat gained the summit for the first time.
Horace-Bénédict de Saussure, the initiator of the first ascent followed next year.
★ The
Norwegian mountain climber,
Jens Esmark was the first person to ascend
Snøhetta in 1798, part of the
Dovrefjell range in Southern
Norway. The same year he lead the first expedition to
Bitihorn, a small mountain in the southernmost outskirts of
Jotunheimen, Norway. In 1810 he was the first person to ascend
Mount Gaustatoppen in
Telemark, Norway.
★ The
Jungfrau was climbed in
1811, the
Finsteraarhorn in
1812, and the
Breithorn in
1813. Thereafter, tourists showed a tendency to climb, and the body of Alpine guides began to come into existence as a consequence.
★
Citlaltépetl (5720 m in
Mexico) was first climbed in 1848 by F. Maynard & G. Reynolds.
★ Systematic mountaineering, as a sport, is usually dated from Sir
Alfred Wills's ascent of the
Wetterhorn in
1854. The first ascent of
Monte Rosa was made in 1855.
★ The
Alpine Club was founded in London in 1857, and was soon imitated in most European countries.
Edward Whymper's ascent of the
Matterhorn in 1865 marked the close of the main period of Alpine conquest – the
Golden age of alpinism – during which the craft of climbing was invented and 'perfected', the body of professional guides formed and their traditions fixed.
★ Passing to other ranges, the exploration of the
Pyrenees was concurrent with that of the Alps. The
Caucasus followed, mainly owing to the initiative of
D. W. Freshfield; it was first visited by exploring climbers in
1868, and most of its great peaks were climbed by 1888.
★ The
Edelweiss Club Salzburg was founded in Salzburg in
1881, and had 3 members make the
First Ascent on 2
Eight-thousanders,
Broad Peak (1957) and
Dhaulagiri (1960).
★ Trained climbers turned their attention to the mountains of
North America in 1888, when the Rev. W. S. Green made an expedition to the
Selkirk Mountains. From that time exploration has gone on apace, and many English and American climbing parties have surveyed most of the highest peaks;
Pikes Peak (14,115 ft.) having been climbed by Mr. E. James and party in 1820, and
Mt. Saint Elias (18,008 ft.) by the
Duke of the Abruzzi and party in 1897. The exploration of the highest
Andes was begun in 1879-1880, when Whymper climbed
Chimborazo and explored the mountains of
Ecuador. The
Cordillera between Chile and Argentina was visited by
Dr. Gussfeldt in 1883, who ascended
Maipo (17,270 ft.) and attempted
Aconcagua (22,841 ft.). That peak was first climbed by the Fitzgerald expedition in 1897.
★ The
Andes of
Bolivia were first explored by Sir
William Martin Conway in
1898. Chilean and Argentine expeditions revealed the structure of the southern Cordillera in the years 1885-1898. Conway visited the mountains of
Tierra del Fuego.
★
New Zealand's
Southern Alps were first visited in 1882 by the Rev. W. S. Green, and shortly afterwards a New Zealand Alpine Club was founded, and by their activities the exploration of the range was pushed forward. In 1895,
Major Edward Arthur Fitzgerald, made an important journey in this range. Tom Fyfe and party climbed
Aoraki/Mount Cook on Christmas Day 1894, denying Fitzgerald the first ascent. Fitzgerald was en route from Britain with Swiss guide
Matthias Zurbriggen to claim the peak. So piqued at being beaten to the top of Mount Cook, he refused to climb it and concentrated on other peaks in the area. Later in the trip Zubriggen soloed Mount Cook up a ridge that now bears his name.
★ The first mountains of the
arctic region explored were those of
Spitzbergen by Sir W. M. Conway's expeditions in 1896 and 1897.
★ Of the high African peaks,
Kilimanjaro was climbed in 1889 by Dr.
Hans Meyer,
Mt. Kenya in 1899 by
Halford John Mackinder[ A Journey to the Summit of Mount Kenya, British East Africa, , Halford John, Mackinder, The Geographical Journal, 1900 ], and a peak of
Ruwenzori by H. J. Moore in 1900.
★ The Asiatic mountains were initially surveyed on orders of the
British Empire. In 1892 Sir
William Martin Conway explored the
Karakoram Himalaya, and climbed a peak of 23,000 ft. In 1895
Albert F. Mummery died while attempting
Nanga Parbat, while in 1899 D. W. Freshfield took an expedition to the snowy regions of
Sikkim. In 1899, 1903, 1906 and 1908 Mrs
Fannie Bullock Workman made ascents in the Himalayas, including one of the
Nun Kun peaks (23,300 ft.). A number of
Gurkha sepoys were trained as expert mountaineers by Major the Hon. C. G. Bruce, and a good deal of exploration was accomplished by them.
★
The Rucksack Club was founded in
Manchester, England in
1902.
★ The
American Alpine Club was founded in 1902.
★ In 1902, the Eckenstein-Crowley Expedition, lead by mountaineer
Oscar Eckenstein and occultist
Aleister Crowley, was the first to attempt to scale Chogo Ri (now known as
K2 in the west). They reached 22,000 feet before turning back due to weather and other mishaps.
★ In
1905, Aleister Crowley led the first expedition to Kanchenjunga, the third highest mountain in the world. Four members of that party were killed in an avalanche. Some claims say they reached around 21,300 feet before turning back, however Crowley's autobiography claims they reached about 25,000 feet.
★ The
1950s saw the first ascents of all the
eight-thousanders but two, starting with
Annapurna in 1950 by
Maurice Herzog and
Louis Lachenal. The world's highest mountain (above mean sea level),
Mount Everest (8,848 m) was first climbed on
May 29 1953 by
Sir Edmund Hillary and
Tenzing Norgay from the south side in
Nepal. Just a few months later,
Hermann Buhl made the first ascent of
Nanga Parbat (8,125 m), a remarkable solo climb, the only eight-thousander to be solo'd on the first ascent.
K2 (8,611 m), the second highest peak in the world was first scaled in
1954. In
1964, the final eight-thousander to be climbed was
Shishapangma (8,013 m), the lowest of all the 8,000 metre peaks.
Further reading
★ Sherry B. Ortner, ''Life & Death on Mt. Everest: Sherpas & Himalayan Mountaineer'', Princeton University Press 1999
See also
★
List of climbers
★
Ski mountaineering
★
Glossary of climbing terms
★
List of climbing topics
★
Mountain rescue
★
Peak bagging
★
Highest unclimbed mountain
★
Alpine hut
★
The Mountaineers (Pacific NW)
★
Outdoor education
★
Lead climbing
★
Rope access
External links
★
Discover a Hobby: Online guide to learn Mountaineering
★
University of Washington Libraries Digital Collections – The Mountaineers Collection Photographic albums and text documenting the Mountaineers official annual outings undertaken by club members from 1907-1951, primarily on the Olympic Peninsula, in Mount Rainier National Park and on Glacier Peak.
★
University of Washington Libraries Digital Collections – Mountaineers: 1920 Outing to Mt. Olympus) Online museum exhibit includes images of camps, maps, and excerpts from the 1913 essay ''Melodious Days'' by Hugh Elmer Brown.
References
1. Lynn Thorndike, Renaissance or Prenaissance, ''Journal of the History of Ideas'', Vol. 4, No. 1. (Jan., 1943), pp. 69-74.
2. The Ascent of Mount Ventoux http://www.idehist.uu.se/distans/ilmh/Ren/ren-pet-ventoux.htm http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/source/petrarch-ventoux.html http://petrarch.petersadlon.com/read_letters.html?s=pet17.html