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| Mount Everest |
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Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world. Its elevation
of 29,035 feet (8,850 meters) was determined using GPS satellite equipment
on May 5, 1999. It was previously believed to be slightly lower (29,028
feet /8,848 meters), as determined in 1954 by averaging measurements
from various sites around the mountain. The new elevation has been
confirmed by the National Geographic Society (See the National Geographic
Society's Mount Everest site for more information).
The first seven attempts on Everest, starting with a reconnaissance
in 1921, approached the mountain from Tibet, where a route to the
summit via the North Col and North Ridge seemed possible. All were
unsuccessful. George Mallory, who spearheaded the first three expeditions,
lost his life with Andrew Irvine during a failed ascent in 1924.
Unsuccessful attempts continued through 1938, then halted during
World War II. By the war's end, Tibet had closed its borders, and
Nepal, previously inaccessible, had done the opposite. Starting
in 1951, expeditions from Nepal grew closer and closer to the summit,
via the Khumbu Icefall, the Western Cwm, over the Geneva Spur to
the South Col, and up the Southeast Ridge. In 1953 Edmund Hillary
and Tenzing Norgay reached the summit.
Since the first successful ascent, many other individuals have
sought to be the first at various other accomplishments on Everest,
including many alternative routes on both the north and south sides.
Italy's Reinhold Messner has climbed Everest twice without oxygen,
once in four days. He is also the first to solo climb Everest, which
he did in 1980. Ten years earlier, Yuichiro Miura of Japan had been
the first person to descend the mountain on skis. In 1975, Junko
Tabei, also of Japan, was the first woman to climb Everest. The
first disabled person to attempt Everest was American Tom Whittaker,
who climbed with a prosthetic leg to 24,000 feet in 1989, 28,000
feet in 1995, and finally reached the summit in 1998. The record
for most ascents belongs to Sherpa Ang Rita, who has reached the
summit ten times.
Overall, more than 600 climbers from 20 countries have climbed
to the summit by various routes from both north and south. Climbers'
ages have ranged from nineteen years to sixty. At least 100 people
have perished, most commonly by avalanches, falls in crevasses,
cold, or the effects of thin air.
Climbing on Everest is very strictly regulated by both the Nepalese
and Chinese governments. Permits cost thousands of U.S. dollars
($50,000 for a seven member party in 1996), and are difficult to
obtain, and waiting lists extend for years. Treks to Everest base
camp, minus the summit attempt, are becoming increasingly popular
on both the north and south sides of the mountain. On the north
side, a Buddhist monastery stands at the foot of the Rongbuk Glacier,
beneath Everest's spectacular north face. The monastery is one of
two whose locations were selected specifically to allow religious
contemplation of the great peak. The other is the Thyangboche Monastery
in Nepal. The once-active Rongbuk monastery in Tibet has required
much rejuvenation from the destruction it experienced following
China's invasion of Tibet.
Mount Everest is also known by the Tibetan name Chomolangma (Goddess
Mother of the Snows), and by the Nepali name Sagarmatha (Mother
of the Universe). |
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