Gasherbrum_II Gasherbrum_II

Gasherbrum II - Definition and Overview

Gasherbrum II

Gasherbrum2.jpg



Gasherbrum II 2001
Elevation:8,035 metres (26,360 feet)
Ranked 13th
Latitude:35° 45′ N
Longitude:76° 39′ E
Location: Gilgit-Baltistan (China-Pakistan)
Range:Karakoram
First ascent:July 8 1956 by an Austrian team
Easiest route:rock/snow/ice climb

Gasherbrum II (also known as K4) is the thirteenth highest mountain on Earth. Gasherbrum II is the third highest peak of the Gasherbrum massif, located in the Karakoram range of the Himalaya.

The standard route is via the SW ridge as it is relatively free of objective hazards such as ice fall and avalanches. A typical expedition lasts 7 to 8 weeks with climbing permits costing about $7,500 USD for five climbers.

Gasherbrum II was first climbed on July 8, 1956 by Fritz Moravec, Josef Larch and Hans Willenpart of an Austrian expedition.

Time Line

  • 1956 First ascent
  • 1975 Second ascent by a French group, 19 years after the first ascent. This expedition also saw the first death on the Gasherbrum. Three other expeditions summit including a Polish women's team headed by Wanda Rutkiewicz.
  • 1979 A Chilean and a German expedition succeed in the sixth and seventh ascents.
  • 1982 Reinhold Messner reaches the top with two Pakistanis.
  • 1984 Messner and Hans Kammerlander traverse Gasherbrum I and Gasherbrum II without returning to base camp in between.

See also

External links


Eight-thousander series
Annapurna | Broad Peak | Cho Oyu | Dhaulagiri | Everest | Gasherbrum I | Gasherbrum II
K2 | Kanchenjunga | Lhotse | Makalu | Manaslu | Nanga Parbat | Shishapangma


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