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Kawagarbo

Coordinates: 28°26′18″N 98°41′00″E / 28.43833°N 98.68333°E / 28.43833; 98.68333
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(Redirected from Kawakarpo)
Kawagarbo
East Face of Kawagarbo
Highest point
Elevation6,740.1 m (22,113 ft)[1][2]
Prominence2,232 m (7,323 ft)[2]
ListingUltra
Coordinates28°26′18″N 98°41′00″E / 28.43833°N 98.68333°E / 28.43833; 98.68333[2]
Geography
Kawagarbo is located in Yunnan
Kawagarbo
Kawagarbo
Location in Yunnan
LocationTibet/Yunnan, China
Parent rangeMeili Xueshan, Hengduan Mountains
Climbing
First ascentunclimbed (as of 2003)[1]
The Meili Xueshan range from Fei Lai Si

Kawa Garbo or Khawa Karpo (Tibetan: ཁ་བ་དཀར་པོ།, ZYPY: Kawagarbo; also transcribed as Kawadgarbo, Khawakarpo, Moirig Kawagarbo, Kawa Karpo or Kha-Kar-Po), as it is known by local residents and pilgrims, or Kawagebo Peak (Chinese: 卡瓦格博), is the highest mountain in the Chinese province of Yunnan.[2] It is located on the border between Dêqên County, Yunnan, and the counties of Zogang and Zayü of the Tibet Autonomous Region. It rises about 20 kilometres (12 mi) west of Shengping (升平镇), the seat of Dêqên County, which lies on China National Highway 214. What is now Dêqên County has been part of Yunnan since the 1720s, when the current border with Tibet was established by the early Qing Dynasty. Kawagarbo is one of the most sacred peaks in the Tibetan world [3] and is often referred to as Nyainqênkawagarbo to show its sacredness and avoid ambiguousness with the other Kawagarbo in the Anung-Derung-speaking Gongshan County.

Geography

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Kawagarbo is the high point in a range of high peaks that are generally referred to by Tibetans also as Kawagarpo. A mapping error by the Chinese army during the 1950s transcribed the name for a lower range of mountains to the north on a much larger area that also included Kawagarbo. The name of this lower range in Tibetan is Menri (Wylie system; Sman-ri in the Wade–Giles system; name means Mountains of Medicinal Herbs), but is most widely known by its Chinese transliteration, Meili Xue Shan (梅里雪山 or Meili Snow Mountain). This is the name most widely applied to the range by Chinese and Western sources.[4] The Meili range is a small massif of the much more extensive Hengduan Shan, the major north-south trending complex of mountains lying along the eastern edge of the Tibetan Plateau in eastern Tibet, northwestern Yunnan, western Sichuan, and far northern Myanmar. The Meili Xue Shan forms part of the divide between the Salween (Nujiang) and Mekong (Lancangjiang) rivers.

The Meili Xue Shan has over 20 peaks with permanent snow cover, including six peaks over 6,000 m (19,700 ft). Topographic extremes are immense, with vertical relief ranging from less than 2,000 m along the Mekong River on the east to 6,740 m on the summit of Kawagarpo within 10 km horizontal distance. Even greater topographic relief is found on the west or Salween River side of the range. Coincident with this extreme topographic gradient is a similarly steep environmental gradient. Compressed within this short distance are subtropical scrub ecosystems along the arid canyon bottoms, rising through dry oak forests, humid mixed deciduous-coniferous forests, cold temperate coniferous forests, alpine meadows and scree above treeline, to permanent snow on the high peaks. The Mingyong Glacier, descending from the summit of Kawagarbo, terminates at a low elevation just before the subtropical life zone.[4] The range is highly affected by the monsoon, leading to especially unstable snow conditions, which have affected climbing attempts (see below).[1]

Sacred mountain worship

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Kawagarbo is one of the most sacred mountains for Tibetan Buddhism as the spiritual home of a warrior god of the same name.[3][5][6] It is visited by 20,000 pilgrims each year from throughout the Tibetan world;[7] many pilgrims circumambulate the peak, an arduous 240 km (150 mi) trek[6] Although it is important throughout Tibetan Buddhism, it is the local Tibetans that are the day-to-day guardians and stewards of Kawagarbo, both the deity and the mountain.[4]

The ancestral religion of the Kawagarpo area, as in much of Tibet, was Bön, a shamanistic tradition based on the concept of a world pervaded by good and evil spirits. Bön encompassed numerous deities and spirits which are still recognized today, and are often connected with specific geographical localities and natural features; the major mountain peaks in the Hengduan Mountains are thus all identified with specific deities. Kawagarbo is one of these. Since its introduction, Tibetan Buddhism has been the dominant religion of the Kawagarbo area, with followers of Gelugpa doctrine being the most common.[4][8]

Tibetans believe that their warrior god would leave them if a human should ever set foot on the peak of Kawakarpo, thereby robbing the peak of its sanctity and leading to disasters in the wake of the loss of the god's protection. Tibetans have also established a centuries-old sacred geography around the peak, maintained by religious leaders from local monasteries in negotiation with local villages. This sacred natural site preserves the natural resources and ecological health of the range.[9]

Climbing history

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The first attempt on Kawakarpo was made in 1987 by a party from the Joetsu Alpine Club of Japan.

In the winter of 1990–91 a Japanese group from the Academic Alpine Club of Kyoto University attempted the peak in conjunction with a Chinese group. Their activity caused heavy protests from the local Tibetan community due to the mountain's cultural and religious significance. On 3 January 1991, a nighttime avalanche killed all seventeen members of the expedition, in one of the most deadly mountaineering accidents in history. The same Japanese club from Kyoto returned in 1996 and made another unsuccessful attempt.[1][10]

American expeditions, led by Nicholas Clinch, visited the range in 1988, 1989, 1992, and 1993, attempting other major peaks, but were unsuccessful.[1]

In 2001, local Chinese government passed laws banning all future climbing attempts on cultural and religious grounds. As of 2010, none of the significant peaks of the range have been successfully climbed.[1]

Retreat of Mingyong Glacier

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Mingyong Glacier descends steeply from the east face of Kawagarbo into the Mekong River valley on the Yunnan side of the massif. Because it descends from near the summit of Kawagarbo, it is also considered sacred by Tibetan Buddhists and two temples are located along its lower edge. From those temples, the rapid retreat of Mingyong Glacier is obvious, especially to local people who observe it year in and year out. A monk from Taizi Temple reflected on this rapid retreat of Mingyong Glacier, concerned that it might be punishment from Kawagarpo for the lack of devotion by him and his fellow Buddhists.[11]

The retreat of Mingyong Glacier, linked to a warming climate in the Deqin area,[12] has received considerable attention for its implications for biodiversity conservation,[13] retrieval of climber's bodies killed in the 1991 avalanche,[14] impacts on Mingyong village water supply,[15][16] and in the broader context of climate change impacts to biological and social systems in northwest Yunnan and beyond.[11][17]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Tamotsu Nakamura. 2003. East of the Himalayas - to the Alps of Tibet. Japanese Alpine News, Volume 4, May 2003 Special Submission.
  2. ^ a b c d "Tibetan ultra-prominent peaks". Jonathan de Ferranti, Eberhard Jurgalski and Aaron Maizlish. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
  3. ^ a b Keith Dowman. 1997. The Sacred Life of Tibet. San Francisco, California, USA: Thorsons.
  4. ^ a b c d Jan Salick and Robert Moseley. 2012. Khawa Karpo: Conservation in a Tibetan Landscape. St. Louis, Missouri, USA: Missouri Botanical Garden Press
  5. ^ Fang Zhengdong, Zhan Lu, He Jianhua, and Gerong Lamu. 1997. Glorification of Kawagebo Snow Mountain. Kunming, Yunnan, China: Yunnan Art Publishing Co.[in Chinese]
  6. ^ a b Renqin Duoji and Qi Jixian. 1999. Khabadkarpo: A Holy Land of Snow Mountains. Kunming, Yunnan, China: Yunnan People's Press. [in Chinese]
  7. ^ Connie Rogers (2005-04-28). "Walking the Sacred Steps of Kawakarpo". International Herald Tribune. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
  8. ^ Bill McQuay (2006-01-23). "The Mountain Home of a Warrior God". National Public Radio. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
  9. ^ Anderson, D.M., Salick, J., Moseley, R.K., and Ou X.K. 2005. Conserving the sacred medicine mountains: A vegetation analysis of Tibetan sacred sites in northwest Yunnan. Biodiversity and Conservation 14(13): 3065-3091
  10. ^ Naoyuki Kobayashi. 2007. The Mingyong Glacier of the Meili Sbow Mountains: Looking for the remains of 17 mounatineers. Japanese Alpine News, Volume 8, pages 125-129, May 2007.
  11. ^ a b Robert K. Moseley. 2011. Revisiting Shangri-La: Photographing a Century of Environmental and Cultural Change in the Mountains of Southwest China. Beijing: China Intercontinental Press
  12. ^ B.B. Baker and R.K. Moseley. 2007. Advancing treeline and retreating glaciers: Implications for conservation in Yunnan, China. Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research 39(2): 200-209
  13. ^ R.K. Moseley. 2006. Historical landscape change in northwestern Yunnan, China: Using repeat photography to assess the perceptions and realities of biodiversity loss. Mountain Research and Development 26(3): 214-219
  14. ^ Naoyuki Kobayashi. 2007. The Mingyong Glacier of the Meili Snow Mountains in China: Looking for the remains of 17 mountaineers. Japanese Alpine News Volume 8, May 2007
  15. ^ Brooks Larmer and Jonas Bendiksen. 2010. The big melt: Glaciers that feed great Asian rivers are shrinking. National Geographic 217(4): 60-95, April 2010
  16. ^ Barbara Demick. 2009. Glaciers in southern China receding rapidly, scientists say. Los Angeles Times, December 15, 2009
  17. ^ Orville Schell. 2010. China's magic melting mountain. Condé Naste Traveler, February 2010
  18. ^ "Three Parallel Rivers of Yunnan Protected Areas".