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8000m Race Hots Up PDF Print E-mail
Written by Traveller   
Tuesday, 19 May 2009

K2

Spanish climber, Edurne Pasaban has moved closer to becoming the first woman to climb 14 of the world's highest mountains after scaling Mount Kangchenjunga on the border between Nepal and India.

The 35-year-old reached the top of the mountain, the world's third-highest with an elevation of 8,586m, with a group of Spanish climbers, her team said in a statement.

The Basque climber is the first woman to climb 12 peaks that reach 8,000m above sea level, including the world's two highest mountains, Everest and K2.

She is competing against Austria's Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner, 38, and Italy's Nives Meroi, 47, to become the first woman to climb all 14 'eight-thousanders'.

Ms Pasaban, who began her bid to make history in 2001, still must climb Annapurna and Shishapangma to meet her goal. Ms Kaltenbrunner and Ms Meroi have so far climbed 11 of the 14 summits.

Ms Meroi, who was also on the slopes of Kangchenjunga, said on Monday on her Internet site that she was abandoning her attempt to climb the mountain due to the exhaustion of her climbing companion, Romano Benet.

The Italian still must climb mount Makalu and Annapurna in addition to Kangchenjunga in order to make history. Ms Kaltenbrunner, meanwhile, is currently climbing mount Lhotse and she still must climb Everest and K2.

An Italian, Reinhold Messner, became the first man to climb all 14 summits in 1986.

The first successful ascent of an 'eight-thousander' was by a French expedition led by Maurice Herzog and Louis Lachenal who reached the summit of Annapurna on June 3, 1950.

The 14 summits are all located in the Himalayan and Karakoram mountain ranges in Asia

Everest 8,850m; 29,035ft; Nepal/Tibet 1953; Sir E. Hillary, T. Norgay

K2 8,611m; 28,250ft; Pakistan 1954; A. Compagnoni, L. Lacedelli

Kangchenjunga 8,586m; 28,169ft; Nepal/India 1955; G. Band, J. Brown

Lhotse 8,516m; 27,940ft; Nepal/Tibet 1956; F. Luchsinger, E. Reiss

Makalu 8,463m; 27,766ft; Nepal 1955; J. Couzy, L. Terrary

Cho-Oyu 8,201m; 26,906ft; Nepal/Tibet 1954; S. Joechler, H. Tichy, P. Dawa Lama

Dhaulagiri 8,167m; 26,795ft; Nepal 1960; K. Diemberger, P. Diener, M. Dorji, E.  Forrer, N. Dorji, A. Schelbert

Manaslu 8,156m; 26,758ft; Nepal 1956; T. Imanishi, G. Norbu

Nanga Parbat 8,125m; 26,660ft; Pakistan 1953; H. Buhl

Annapurna 8,091m; 26,545ft; Nepal 1950; M. Herzog, L. Lachenal

Gasherbrum I 8,068m; 26,470ft; Pakistan/China 1958; A. Kaufman, P. Schoening

Broad Peak 8,047m; 26,400ft; Pakistan/China 1957; H. Buhl, K. Diemberger, M. Schmuck, F. Witerstellar

Gasherbrum II 8,035m; 26,360ft; Pakistan/China 1956; S. Larch, F. Moravec, H. Willenpart

Shishapangma 8,013m; 26,291ft; China/Tibet 1964; H. Ching & nine other climbers

feed1 Comments
Alun
May 22, 2009
86.136.208.91
Votes: +0

It sure is hotting up - here's more on the race to be the 1st female to climb all the 8000's


South Korean Oh Eun-sun, 43, became Korea's first and the world's third female mountaineer to conquer the 11 highest Himalayan peaks, her agency said Friday.

The Black Yak said Oh climbed to top of the 8,167-meter-high Dhaulagiri ㅡ the seventh highest peak among 14 highest Himalayan mountains ㅡ at 1:30 p.m. Thursday.

``She was confirmed to have stood at the top without oxygen,'' said Kang Tae-seon, head of her agency. ``It took about 12 hours for her to reach the top after leaving her third and last base camp established at 7,300 meters.''

The world record is held by Gerlinde Kaltenbrunne, 39, of Austria and Spain's Edurne Pasaban, 36, both of whom have reached the 12 highest Himalayan peaks.

Oh achieved the unprecedented feat only 15 days after she conquered the 8,586-meter-high Kanchenjunga on May 6 without oxygen, the agency said.

Conquering the 14 highest mountains in the Himalayas has been her long-cherished dream, with only 13 people in the world including South Korean climbers Um Hong-gil, Park Young-seok, and Han Wang-yong making it.

She plans to climb Nanga Parbat, 8,126 meters; Hidden Peak, 8,068 meters; and Annapurna, 8,091 meters in the near future.

Oh is scheduled to return to Seoul on Monday and will then leave for Pakistan next month to climb Nanga Parbat and the Hidden Peak by July.

In an interview before her departure, she said, ``Since there is no woman in the world who has climbed all 14 summits, I hope I will be the first."

``By conquering the 14 world's tops, I would like to give hope to Korean people suffering from the slumping economy,'' she said.

She first drew attention in 1997 by climbing to the top of the 8,035-meter-high GasherbrumⅡ. In 2004, Oh became the first Asian woman to conquer the world's highest peak, Mount Everest.

Born in 1966, Oh majored in engineering at the University of Suwon in Gyeonggi Province. She is the first Korean woman to climb the seven highest peaks on all seven continents.

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