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Distaghil Sar

Coordinates: 36°19′33″N 75°11′18″E / 36.32583°N 75.18833°E / 36.32583; 75.18833
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Disteghil Sar
دستاغل سر
Disteghil Sar seen from space
Highest point
Elevation7,885 m (25,869 ft)[1]
Ranked 19th
Prominence2,525 m (8,284 ft)[1]
ListingUltra
Coordinates36°19′33″N 75°11′18″E / 36.32583°N 75.18833°E / 36.32583; 75.18833[1]
Geography
Disteghil Sar دستاغل سر is located in Pakistan
Disteghil Sar دستاغل سر
Disteghil Sar
دستاغل سر
Pakistan
Disteghil Sar دستاغل سر is located in Gilgit Baltistan
Disteghil Sar دستاغل سر
Disteghil Sar
دستاغل سر
Disteghil Sar
دستاغل سر (Gilgit Baltistan)
LocationShimshal Valley, Gilgit-Baltistan region, Pakistan
Parent rangeHispar Muztagh, Karakoram
Climbing
First ascent9 June 1960 by Günther Stärker and Diether Marchart of an Austrian team
Easiest routeGlacier/snow/ice climb
Distaghil Sar
Simplified Chinese迪斯特吉峰
Transcriptions

Disteghil Sar or Distaghil Sar (Template:Lang-ur) is the highest mountain in the Shimshal Valley, part of the Karakoram mountain range in Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan. It is the 19th-highest mountain on Earth and the 7th-highest in Pakistan. Disteghil sar is a Wakhi language word suggested by the Wakhi people of Shimshal,[2] meaning "above the inner ranch." The mountain has a 3-kilometre-long (1.9 mi) top ridge above 7,400 meters elevation, with three distinct summits: Northwest, 7885 m; Central, 7760 m; and Southeast, 7696m or 7535m.

Climbing history

Distaghil Sar was first climbed in 1960 by Günther Stärker and Diether Marchart of an Austrian expedition led by Wolfgang Stefan. The expedition climbed the western part of the south face and continued over the southwest ridge to the highest summit. Three years earlier, in 1957, an English expedition had attempted to climb the mountain from the south and the west, but failed due to bad weather. Likewise, weather foiled a 1959 Swiss attempt over the southeast ridge. The highest, western summit has been scaled twice since in 1980 and 1982 over the original route. Two attempts over the daunting north face, in 1988 and 1998, were unsuccessful. The eastern summit was first climbed in 1980 by a Polish expedition over the east face, and was reascended in 1983.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "High Asia I: The Karakoram, Pakistan Himalaya and India Himalaya (north of Nepal)". Peaklist.org. Retrieved 2014-05-27.
  2. ^ "Hispar area expeditions". echidna.rutgers.edu. Archived from the original on 27 April 2008. Retrieved 15 January 2022.

Sources