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PAKISTAN’S MAGICAL LAND OF MOUNTAINS Pakistan’s northern frontier is a stunning land of
mountains. Eighty four thousand square kilometers (33 thousand square
miles) and 9 percent of Pakistan’s total area of 888 thousand square
kilometers (350 thousand square miles), stretching from the Arabian Sea through
the length of 18 hundred kilometers to the unbelievable lofty heights of the
land of the mountain goods, the world’s third pole-into a polar environment of a
strange remnant of some primeval ice age of the biggest glaciers outside the
polar regions, this is the true roof of the world. Here meet all three of the world’s highest mountain ranges- the mighty Himalayas, the grandiose
Karakoram and the breath taking Hindu Kush-with their literally hundreds of mountains in the high test concentrations of dizzying peaks-five of the 14 over 8000 meter peaks including the second highest mountain in the world, the K-2 and 121 peaks over 7000 meters (23 thousand feet) within a radius of 180 kilometers (112 miles) It is a land where the majestic K-2 stands at the head of the Godwin Austin glacier in an amazing smooth, black pyramid at a height of 8,616 meters (28,250 feet) in the theatre of the awesome Concordia, with the Gasherbrum 1 (hidden peak) at 8086 meters- the second highest Karakoram peak and 11th highest in the world, the Broad peak of this mighty amphitheatre of the four Karakoram peaks is the mammoth Baltoro glacier, which is 62 Kms long with a surface area of 1219 square Kms. Besides the Baltoro the Hisper (53 km long) joins the Biafo to form an ice corridor, 116 k long. In this highest concentration of the most spectacular mountains of the world can be seen the marble peak, the Gasherbrum Group , the Golden Throne peak (7,365 m) and the Chogolisa (7686 m)-where Herman Buhl, the conqueror of fearsome Nanga Parbat, the fifth over 8000 meter Himalayan peak in Pakistan, lost his life in 1957
The local folklore of these areas is full of jinn's living
alongside the people and even taking a share of the produce of the land of the
farmers! K-2 the second highest mountain, which Reinhold messier unforgettably
called the mountain of the mountains is considered a bigger challenge for
climbers than Everest, the highest peak in the world. For a long time K-2 called
cho-go-ri in the local Balti language, meaning 'The King' was considered
un-climbable Attempts to summit it in 1902, 1909, 1934, 1938 and 1953 all failed
it was finally conquered by Italian climbers—Lino laced Elli & Achille
Compagnoni (pronounced camp-pan-noni) in 1954, and ever since the Italians have
adoped it as the prize they won!
Pakistan's fifth over 8000 meter peak the Nanga Parbat, is the lone Himalayan peak of the region. At 8,125 meters, it is the 9th tallest mountain in the world. Of the 14 over eight thousand meter peaks in the world, 10 are Himalayan mountains. Everest, Kangchenjunga, Lhotse, Makalu, Cho oyu Dhaulagiri Namaslu, Nanga Parbat, Annapurna & Shisha Pangma. Eight of these are in Nepal while Nanga Parbat is a Pakistan mountain and the only Himalayan one over 8 thousand peak here whereas, the smallest of the over 8 thousand meter culb, the Shisha Pangma, is in China All of the rest are Karakoram peaks, k-2 Gasherbrum I & II & Broad Peak and all of these are in Pakistan- within 20 km of each other! Nanga Parbat is located in Relative isolation from the Himalayas at eh western most end of the range in Pakistan & is 200 km away from its other 8000 meter companions. Nanga Parbat was first climbed on July 3, 1953 by Herman Bhul part of a German Austio team-who paid the heavy price of the lives of 11 climbers & 15 porters to the Killer Mountain as it is called Other soul stirring sights are the beautiful snow lake long thought to be an ice cap but later found to be just a huge lake of snow and the Deosai plans that stretch for 63 km to form the highest plateau in the world The locals belvied that a fine gossamer line is threaded through the incredible peaks in this area to keep them in place! Certainly the unmistakable hand of a master craftsman in undeniably evident here—more so than at any other spot in the world. What is certain is that one cannot come away from here, without bringing back some of it in your very soul! |
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