
Map of the
Ladakh region with Nun and Kun mountains in the west
The 'Nun Kun' mountain
massif comprises a pair of
Himalayan peaks: 'Nun', 7,135 m (23,409 ft) and its neighbor peak 'Kun', 7,077 m (23,218 ft).
[1] Nun is the highest peak in the part of the Himalayan range lying on the
Indian side of the
Line of Control in
Jammu and Kashmir. (There are higher peaks in the Indian part of the
Karakoram range.) The massif is located near the
Suru valley, about 100 km (60 mi) east of
Srinagar, the capital of Kashmir.
Kun is located north of Nun and is separated from it by a snowy
plateau of about 4 km (2.5 mi) in length.
Pinnacle Peak, 6,930 m (22,736 ft), is the third highest summit of the group.
Mountaineering
Early exploration of the massif included a visit in 1898 and three visits by Arthur Neve, in 1902, 1904, and 1910. In 1903, Dutch mountaineer Dr. H. Sillem investigated the massif and discovered the high plateau between the peaks; he reached an altitude of 6,400 m (21,000 ft) on Nun. In 1906, noted explorer couple
William Hunter Workman and
Fanny Bullock Workman claimed an ascent of Pinnacle Peak. They also toured extensively through the massif and produced a map; however, controversy surrounded the Workmans' claims, and few trigonometrical points were given for the region, so that the map they produced was not usable.
[2]
After unsuccessful attempts to climb the mountain in 1934 and 1937, the
first ascent of Nun was in 1953 by a
French-Swiss-
Indian-
Sherpa team led by Bernard Pierre and
Pierre Vittoz, via the west ridge. The summit pair comprised Vittoz, a Moravian missionary to the Tibetans and an experienced alpinist, and
Claude Kogan, a pioneering female mountaineer.
[3] Since then, other routes have been pioneered.
[4] The north-west face was first ascended in 1976 by seven climbers from a Czech expedition.
Italian mountaineer
Mario Piacenza made the first ascent of Kun in 1913, via the north-east ridge. Fifty-eight years passed before the second recorded attempt on the peak, which resulted in a successful ascent by an expedition from the
Indian Army.
The massif is most conveniently accessed from the road connecting
Kargil and
Leh.
References
1. Figures for Kun's elevation vary between 7,035 m and 7,086 m.
2. ''High Asia: An Illustrated History of the 7000 Metre Peaks'' by Jill Neate, ISBN 0-89886-238-8
3. Pierre Vittoz, ''Ascent of the Nun'', in ''The Mountain World: 1954'' (Marcel Kurz, ed.), George Allen & Unwin, Ltd., London, 1954.
4. Andy Fanshawe and Stephen Venables, ''Himalaya Alpine Style'', Hodder and Stoughton, 1995
External links
★
Suru and Zanskar valley
★
Topography of Nun Kun ex Geographical Journal 1920