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Coordinates: 03°04′33″S 37°21′12″E / 3.07583°S 37.35333°E / -3.07583; 37.35333
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{{Infobox mountain
| name =Kilimanjaro
| photo = Mount Kilimanjaro.jpg
| photo_caption = The Kibo summit of Mount Kilimanjaro.
| map = Tanzania#Africa <!--|relief=1-->
| map_caption = Kilimanjaro's location in Tanzania
| location = [[Kilimanjaro Region]], north east [[Tanzania]]
| label_position = right
| elevation_m = 5,895
| elevation_ref = <ref name="TNP"/><ref name="UNESCO">{{cite web | url=http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/403 | title=Kilimanjaro National Park | publisher=UNESCO World Heritage Centre | work=World Heritage List | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref>
| prominence_m = 5,885
| prominence_ref = <ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.peakbagger.com/peak.aspx?pid=11202 | title=Kilimanjaro | publisher=Peakbagger.com | accessdate=16 August 2012}}</ref><br/><small>Ranked 4th</small><ref>{{cite web | title=World Peaks with 4000 meters of Prominence | url=http://www.peakbagger.com/list.aspx?lid=401 | website=Peakbagger.com | accessdate=8 November 2015}}</ref>
| listing = {{unbulleted list | [[Seven Summits]] | [[Highest mountain peaks of Africa|Highest mountains of Africa]] | [[Volcanic Seven Summits]] | [[List of countries by highest point|Country highest point]] | [[Ultra prominent peak|Ultra]] | [[Seven Third Summits]] (Mawenzi) }}
| range = The [[Eastern Rift mountains]]
| coordinates = {{coord|03|04|33|S|37|21|12|E|type:mountain_region:TZ-09_scale:100000|format=dms|display=inline,title}}
| topo = Kilimanjaro map and guide by Wielochowski<ref name=map>{{cite map | publisher=EWP | title=Kilimanjaro Map and tourist Guide | url=http://maps.ewpnet.com/kilimap.asp | edition=4th | year=2009 | cartography=EWP | scale=1:75,000 with 1:20,000 and 1:30,000 insets | series=EWP Map Guides | isbn=0-906227-66-6 | deadurl=yes | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150717212549/http://maps.ewpnet.com/kilimap.asp | archivedate=2015-07-17 | df= }}</ref>
| coordinates_ref =
| type = [[Stratovolcano]]
| age = 3 million years
| last_eruption = Between 150,000 and 200,000 years ago
| first_ascent = 6 October 1889 by [[Hans Meyer (geologist)|Hans Meyer]] and [[Ludwig Purtscheller]]
| easiest_route = [[Hiking]]
| range_coordinates =
}}
[[File:Kilimanjaro from space 2016.jpg|thumb|Mount Kilimanjaro from space, illustrating its diverse vegetation zones.<ref>[http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=89605&src=eoa-iotd The Zones of Kilimanjaro], NASA Earth Observatory, 2016</ref>]]

'''Mount Kilimanjaro''' or just '''Kilimanjaro''' ({{IPAc-en|pron|ˌ|k|ɪ|l|ɪ|m|ə|n|ˈ|dʒ|ɑː|r|oʊ}}),<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/english/Kilimanjaro-Mount | title=Oxford dictionary: definition of Kilimanjaro, Mount (British & World English) | publisher=Oxford University Press | work=Oxford dictionary | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref> with its three [[volcanic cone]]s, "Kibo", "Mawenzi", and "Shira", is a dormant [[volcano]] in [[Tanzania]]. It is the highest [[African mountains|mountain in Africa]], about {{convert|4900|m|ft}} from its base, and {{Convert|5895|m|ft}} above sea level. The first people known to have reached the summit of the mountain were [[Hans Meyer (geologist)|Hans Meyer]] and [[Ludwig Purtscheller]] in 1889. The mountain is part of the [[Kilimanjaro National Park]] and is a major climbing destination. The mountain has been the subject of many scientific studies because of its shrinking glaciers and disappearing ice fields.

==Geology and physical features==
Kilimanjaro is a large [[stratovolcano]] and is composed of three distinct volcanic cones: Kibo, the highest; Mawenzi at {{Convert|5149|m|ft}};<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.peakware.com/peaks.html?pk=2084 | title=Mawenzi | publisher=Interactive Outdoors, Inc | work=Peakware | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref> and Shira, the shortest at {{Convert|4005|m|ft}}.<ref name="Kaser">{{cite journal | url=https://www.geo.umass.edu/climate/tanzania/pubs/cullen_etal_2006_grl.pdf | title=Kilimanjaro Glaciers: Recent areal extent from satellite data and new interpretation of observed 20th century retreat rates |author1=Nicolas J. Cullen | author2=Thomas Mölg | author3=Georg Kaser | author4=Khalid Hussein | author5=Konrad Steffen | author6=Douglas R. Hardy | last-author-amp=yes | journal=Geophysical Research Letters | year=2006 | volume=33 | issue=16 | pages=L16502 | doi=10.1029/2006GL027084 | format=PDF | bibcode=2006GeoRL..3316502C}}</ref> Mawenzi and Shira are [[Volcano#Extinct|extinct]], while Kibo is [[Volcano#Dormant|dormant]] and could erupt again.<ref name="NonnottePhilippe">{{cite journal | author1=Nonnotte, Philippe | author2=Hervé Guillou | author3 = Bernard Le Gall | author4 = Mathieu Benoit | author5 = Joseph Cotten | author6 = Stéphane Scaillet | title=New K-Ar age determinations of Kilimanjaro volcano in the North Tanzanian diverging rift, East Africa | journal=Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | year=2008 | volume=173 | issue=1–2 | pages=99–112 | accessdate=29 July 2015 | doi=10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2007.12.042 | url=http://hal.univ-brest.fr/file/index/docid/304458/filename/Nonnotte_et_al.J.Volc.Geoth.Res-08.pdf| bibcode=2008JVGR..173...99N }}</ref>

Uhuru Peak is the highest summit on Kibo's crater rim. The [[Tanzania National Parks Authority]], a Tanzanian governmental agency,<ref name="TNP">{{cite web|url=http://www.tanzaniaparks.com/kili.html |title=Kilimanjaro National Park |publisher=Tanzania National Parks |work=Tanzania National Parks |accessdate=16 July 2015 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120923032157/http://www.tanzaniaparks.com/kili.html |archivedate=23 September 2012 |df= }}</ref> and the [[United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization]]<ref name="UNESCO"/> list the height of Uhuru Peak as {{Convert|5895|m|ft|0|abbr=on}}. That height is based on a [[Ordnance Survey|British Ordnance Survey]] in 1952.<ref name="Digital">{{cite web | url=http://ceur-ws.org/Vol-1142/paper12.pdf | title=The New Digital Orthometric Elevation Model of Kilimanjaro | publisher=CEUR Workshop Proceedings | accessdate=16 July 2015 | author=Pascal Sirguey, Nicolas J. Cullen and Jorge Filipe Dos Santos}}</ref> Since then, the height has been measured as {{Convert|5892|m|ft}} in 1999, {{Convert|5891|m|ft}} in 2008, and {{Convert|5888|m|ft}} in 2014.<ref name="Digital"/>

=== Geology ===
The interior of the volcanic edifice is poorly known, given the lack of large scale erosion that could have exposed the interiors of the volcano.<ref name="Preliminary">{{cite journal | url=http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?fromPage=online&aid=4713936&fileId=S0016756800066590 | title=Preliminary Notes on the Geology of Kilimanjaro | author=W. H. Wilcockson | journal=Geological Magazine | year=1956 | volume=93 | issue=3 | pages=218–228 | doi=10.1017/S0016756800066590| bibcode=1956GeoM...93..218W }}</ref>

Eruptive activity at the Shira centre commenced about 2.5 million years ago, with the last important phase occurring about 1.9 million years ago, just before the northern part of the edifice collapsed.<ref name="NonnottePhilippe"/> Shira is topped by a broad [[plateau]] at {{convert|3800|m|ft}}, which may be a filled [[caldera]]. The remnant caldera rim has been degraded deeply by erosion. Before the caldera formed and erosion began, Shira might have been between 4,900 m (16,000&nbsp;ft) and 5,200 m (17,000&nbsp;ft) high. It is mostly composed of basic lavas with some [[pyroclastics]]. The formation of the caldera was accompanied by lava emanating from [[Fracture (geology)|ring fractures]], but there was no large scale [[Explosive eruption|explosive activity]]. Two cones formed subsequently, the [[phonolite|phonolitic]] one at the northwest end of the ridge and the [[diabase|doleritic]] "Platzkegel" in the caldera centre.<ref name="NonnottePhilippe"/><ref name="Preliminary"/><ref name="JohnBarryDawson">{{cite book | author=John Barry Dawson | title=The Gregory Rift Valley and Neogene-recent Volcanoes of Northern Tanzania | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Om2oMjXK3R4C&pg=PA56|year=2008|publisher=Geological Society of London | isbn=978-1-86239-267-0|page=56}}</ref>

Both Mawenzi and Kibo began erupting about 1 million years ago.<ref name="NonnottePhilippe"/> They are separated by the "Saddle Plateau" at {{convert|4400|m|ft}} elevation.<ref name="AnAscentOfKilimanjaro">{{cite journal |title= An Ascent of Kilimanjaro | author=C. Gillman | journal=The Geographical Journal | year=1923 |volume= 61 |issue=1 |doi= 10.2307/1780513 |jstor= 1780513 | pages=1–21}}</ref>{{rp|3}}

[[File:Mount Kilimanjaro Dec 2009 edit1.jpg|thumb|left|Aerial view of Kilimanjaro in December 2009]]
The youngest dated rocks at Mawenzi are about 448,000 years old.<ref name="NonnottePhilippe"/> Mawenzi forms a horseshoe shaped ridge with [[Rock pinnacle|pinnacles]] and ridges opening to the northeast that has a tower-like shape resulting from deep erosion and a [[mafic]] [[dyke swarm]]. Several large [[cirque]]s cut into the ring, the largest of these sits on top of the Great Barranco gorge. Also notable are the Ost and West Barrancos on the northeastern side of the mountain. Most of the eastern side of the mountain has been removed by erosion. Mawenzi has a [[subsidiary peak]] named Neumann Tower ({{convert|4425|m|ft}}).<ref name="NonnottePhilippe"/><ref name="Preliminary"/><ref name="JohnBarryDawson"/>

Kibo is the largest cone and is more than {{convert|15|mi|km}} wide at the "Saddle Plateau" altitude. The last activity here has been dated to between 150,000 and 200,000 years ago and created the current Kibo summit crater. Kibo still has gas-emitting [[fumarole]]s in the crater.<ref name="NonnottePhilippe"/><ref name="Preliminary"/><ref name="JohnBarryDawson"/> Kibo is capped by an almost symmetrical cone with [[escarpment]]s rising {{convert|180|m|feet}} to {{convert|200|m|feet}} on the south side. These escarpments define a {{convert|2.5|km|mile|adj=mid|-wide}} caldera<ref name="Glaciers of Middle East"/> caused by the collapse of the summit. Within this caldera is the Inner Cone and within the crater of the Inner Cone is the Reusch Crater, which the Tanganyika government in 1954 named after Gustav Otto Richard Reusch upon his climbing the mountain for the 25th time (out of 65 attempts during his lifetime).<ref>{{cite web | url=http://cvgs.cu-portland.edu/history/biographies/bio.cfm?id=529 | title=Gustav Otto Richard Reusch | publisher=The Center for Volga German Studies at Concordia University | work=Biographies | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite book | author=Richard Leider | title=The Power of Purpose: Find Meaning, Live Longer, Better | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_s4B9LI7BX0C&pg=PA12 | date=10 May 2010 | publisher=Berrett-Koehler Publishers|isbn=978-1-60509-527-1 | page=12}}</ref> The Ash Pit, {{convert|350|m|ft}} deep, lies within the Reusch Crater.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://volcano.oregonstate.edu/kilimanjaro | title=Kilimanjaro | publisher=Oregon State University | work=Volcano World | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref> About 100,000 years ago, part of Kibo's crater rim collapsed, creating the area known as the [[Western Breach]] and the Great Barranco.<ref>{{cite book | author=Alex Stewart | title=Kilimanjaro: A Complete Trekker's Guide: Preparations, practicalities and trekking routes to the 'Roof of Africa' | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=28N6F2wBSM8C&pg=PA97 | date=23 April 2012 | publisher=Cicerone Press Limited | isbn=978-1-84965-622-1 | page=100}}</ref>

An almost continuous layer of lavas buries most older geological features, with the exception of exposed [[Stratum|strata]] within the Great West Notch and the Kibo Barranco. The former exposes intrusions of [[syenite]].<ref name="Preliminary"/> Kibo has five main lava formations:<ref name="NonnottePhilippe"/>
* [[Phonotephrite]]s and [[tephriphonolite]]s of the "Lava Tower group", on a [[Dike (geology)|dyke]] cropping out at {{convert|4600|m|ft}}, 482,000 years ago
* Tephriphonolite to phonolite lavas "characterized by rhomb mega-phenocrysts of sodic feldspars" of the "Rhomb Porphyry group", 460,000–360,000 years ago
* [[Phenocryst|aphyric]] phonolite lavas, "commonly underlain by basal obsidian horizons", of the "Lent group", 359,000–337,000 years ago
* [[Porphyry (geology)|porphyritic]] tephriphonolite to phonolite lavas of the "Caldera rim group", 274,000–170,000 years ago
* phonolite lava flows with [[aegirine]] [[phenocryst]]s, of the "Inner Crater group", which represents the last volcanic activity on Kibo

Kibo has more than 250 [[parasitic cone]]s on its northwest and southeast flanks that were formed between 150,000 and 200,000 years ago<ref name="NonnottePhilippe"/> and erupted [[picrobasalt]]s, [[trachybasalt]]s, [[ankaramite]]s, and [[basanite]]s.<ref name="NonnottePhilippe"/><ref name="Preliminary"/><ref name="JohnBarryDawson"/> They reach as far as [[Lake Chala]] and [[Taita-Taveta County|Taveta]] in the southeast and the Lengurumani Plain in the northwest. Most of these cones are well preserved, with the exception of the Saddle Plateau cones that were heavily affected by glacial action. Despite their mostly small size, lava from the cones has obscured large portions of the mountain. The Saddle Plateau cones are mostly cinder cones with terminal effusion of lava, while the Upper Rombo Zone cones mostly generated lava flows. All Saddle Plateau cones predate the last glaciation.<ref name="Preliminary"/>

According to reports gathered in the 19th century from the [[Maasai people|Maasai]], Lake Chala on Kibo's eastern flank was the site of a village that was destroyed by an eruption.<ref name="ShearsonHyland"/>

=== Drainage ===
The mountain is drained by a network of rivers and streams, especially on the wetter and more heavily eroded southern side and especially above {{convert|1200|m|ft}}. Below that altitude, increased evaporation and human water usage reduces the waterflows. The [[Lumi River (East Africa)|Lumi]] and [[Pangani River|Pangani]] rivers drain Kilimanjaro on the eastern and southern sides, respectively.<ref>{{cite book | author=William Dubois Newmark | title=The Conservation of Mount Kilimanjaro | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0Is9h1vm90AC&pg=PA22 | year=1991 | publisher=IUCN | isbn=978-2-8317-0070-0 | pages=105–106}}</ref>

[[File:The Kibo and Mawenzi Cones of Mt. Kilimanjaro.jpg|700px|thumb|center|Two of Kilimanjaro's volcanic cones: Kibo (left) and Mawenzi (right).]]

==Name==
[[File:Meyers b14 s0300a.jpg|thumb|The Historical map with "''Kilima-Ndscharo''" during the [[German East Africa]] in the year 1888]]
The origin of the name "Kilimanjaro" is not precisely known, but a number of theories exist. European explorers had adopted the name by 1860 and reported that "Kilimanjaro" was the mountain's [[Kiswahili]] name.<ref name="Krapf">{{cite book | author1=Johann Ludwig Krapf | author2=Ernest George Ravenstein | title=Travels, Researches, and Missionary Labours, During an Eighteen Years' Residence in Eastern Africa: Together with Journeys to Jagga, Usambara, Ukambani, Shoa, Abessinia and Khartum, and a Coasting Voyage from Nombaz to Cape Delgado | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=z78NAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA255 | year=1860 | publisher=Trübner and Company, Paternoster Row. | page=255}}</ref> The 1907 edition of ''The Nuttall Encyclopædia'' also records the name of the mountain as "Kilima-Njaro".<ref>{{cite web | url=http://words.fromoldbooks.org/Wood-NuttallEncyclopaedia/k/kilima-njaro.html | title=Kilima-Njaro | publisher=fromoldbooks.org | work=1907 Nuttall Encyclopædia of General Knowledge | date=1907 | accessdate=16 July 2015 | author=James Wood}}</ref>

[[Johann Ludwig Krapf]] wrote in 1860 that Swahilis along the coast called the mountain "Kilimanjaro". Although he did not support his claim,<ref name="Hutchinson"/> he claimed that "Kilimanjaro" meant either "mountain of greatness" or "mountain of caravans". Under the latter meaning, "Kilima" meant "mountain" and "Jaro" possibly meant "caravans".<ref name="Krapf"/>

Jim Thompson claimed in 1885, although he also did not support his claim,<ref name="Hutchinson"/> that the term Kilima-Njaro "has generally been understood to mean" the Mountain (Kilima) of Greatness (Njaro). "Though not improbably it may mean" the "White" mountain.<ref>
[https://books.google.com/books?id=9PETAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA116#v=onepage&q&f=false ''Through Masai land: a journey of exploration among the snowclad volcanic mountains and strange tribes of eastern equatorial Africa'', authored by Johann Ludwig Krapf and Ernest George Ravenstein, Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, London, 1887]</ref>

"Njaro" is an ancient Kiswahili word for "shining".<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www2.jpl.nasa.gov/srtm/tanzania.htm#PIA03355 | title=Perspective with Landsat Overlay | publisher=California Institute of Technology | work=SRTM TANZANIA IMAGES | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref> Similarly, Krapf wrote that a chief of the [[Kamba people|Wakamba people]], whom he visited in 1849, "had been to Jagga and had seen the Kima jaJeu, mountain of whiteness, the name given by the Wakamba to Kilimanjaro...."<ref>{{cite book | author1=Johann Ludwig Krapf | author2=Ernest George Ravenstein | title=Travels, Researches, and Missionary Labours, During an Eighteen Years' Residence in Eastern Africa: Together with Journeys to Jagga, Usambara, Ukambani, Shoa, Abessinia and Khartum, and a Coasting Voyage from Nombaz to Cape Delgado | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=z78NAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA544 | year=1860 | publisher=Trübner and Company, Paternoster Row. | page=544}}</ref> More correctly in the [[Kikamba language]], this would be Kiima Kyeu, and this possible derivation has been popular with several investigators.<ref name="Hutchinson"/>

Others have assumed that "Kilima" is Kiswahili for "mountain". The problem with this assumption is that "Kilima" actually means "hill" and is, therefore, the [[diminutive]] of "Mlima", the proper Kiswahili word for mountain. However, "[i]t is ... possible ... that an early European visitor, whose knowledge of [Kiswahili] was not extensive, changed mlima to kilima by analogy with the two [[Chaga languages|Wachagga]] names; Kibo and Kimawenzi."<ref name="Hutchinson"/>

A different approach is to assume that the "Kileman" part of Kilimanjaro comes from the Kichagga "kileme", which means "which defeats", or "kilelema", which means "which has become difficult or impossible". The "Jaro" part would "then be derived from njaare, a bird, or, according to other informants, a leopard, or, possibly from jyaro a caravan." Considering that the name Kilimanjaro has never been current among the [[Chaga people|Wachagga people]], it is possible that the name was derived from Wachagga saying that the mountain was unclimbable, "kilemanjaare" or "kilemajyaro" and porters misinterpreted this as being the name of the mountain.<ref name="Hutchinson"/>

In the 1880s, the mountain became a part of [[German East Africa]] and was called "Kilima-Ndscharo" in German following the Kiswahili name components.<ref>Briggs, Philip (1996): "Guide to Tanzania; 2nd edition." Bradt Guides.</ref>

On 6 October 1889, [[Hans Meyer (geologist)|Hans Meyer]] reached the highest summit on the crater ridge of Kibo. He named it "Kaiser-Wilhelm-Spitze" ("[[Wilhelm II, German Emperor|Kaiser Wilhelm]] peak").<ref>{{cite conference | url=http://icaci.org/files/documents/ICC_proceedings/ICC2003/Papers/110.pdf | title=GERMAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE CARTOGRAPHY OF SOUTH WEST AND EAST AFRICA FROM MID 19th CENTURY TO WORLD WAR I | publisher=University of Technology Darmstadt | accessdate=16 July 2015 | author=Demhardt, I.J.}}</ref> That name apparently was used until Tanzania was formed in 1964,<ref>{{cite journal | title=Further Notes on the Kibo Inner Crater and Glaciers of Kilimanjaro and Mount Kenya | author=P. C. Spink | journal=The Geographical Journal | year=1945 | volume=106 | issue=5–6 | pages=213 | doi=10.2307/1788958 | jstor=1788958}}</ref> when the summit was renamed "Uhuru Peak", meaning "Freedom Peak" in Kiswahili.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://www.alpinejournal.org.uk/Contents/Contents_1965_files/AJ%201965%20320-330%20Dangar%20Alpine%20Notes.pdf | title=Dangar Alpine Notes | author=D. F. O. Dangar | journal=The Alpine Journal | year=1965 | volume=70 | issue=310–311 | pages=328}}</ref>

[[File:Mount Kilimanjaro peeking through the clouds.jpg|thumb|Peeking]]

==History==

===First sightings by non-indigenous explorers===
[[File:Der-Kilimandscharo.jpg|thumb|Kilimanjaro in 1911]]
[[File:The National Archives UK - CO 1069-3-175.jpg|thumb|From the UK [[The National Archives (United Kingdom)|National Archives]]]]
[[File:ETH-BIB-Blick ins Kraterloch des Kibo aus 6500 m Höhe-Kilimanjaroflug 1929-30-LBS MH02-07-0119.tif|thumb|First aerial photograph of Kibo taken by [[Walter Mittelholzer]] in 1929]]

The mountain may have been known to non-Africans since [[classical antiquity|antiquity]]. Sailors' reports recorded by [[Ptolemy]] mention a "Moon Mountain" and a spring lake of the Nile, which may indicate Kilimanjaro; although available historical information does not allow differentiation among [[Mount Kenya]], the mountains of Ethiopia, the [[Virunga Mountains]], Kilimanjaro, and the [[Rwenzori Mountains]]. Before Ptolemy, [[Aeschylus]] and [[Herodotus]] referred to "Egypt nurtured by the snows" and a spring between two mountains, respectively. One of these mentions two tall mountains in the coastal regions with a valley with traces of fire in between. [[Martín Fernández de Enciso]], a Spanish traveller to [[Mombasa]] who obtained information about the interior from native caravans, said in his ''Summa de Geografía'' (1519) that west of Mombasa "stands the Ethiopian Mount Olympus, which is exceedingly high, and beyond it are the Mountains of the Moon, in which are the sources of the Nile".<ref name="ShearsonHyland">{{cite journal | url=https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/BF02993444 | title=Ueber die Gesteine des Kilimandscharo und dessen Umgebung | author=J. Shearson Hyland | journal=Mineralogische und petrographische Mitteilungen | year=1889 | volume=10 | issue=3 | pages=203–268 | doi=10.1007/BF02993444 | language=de | via=Springer Link| doi-broken-date=2018-03-12 }}</ref><ref name=meyer>{{cite book | author=Hans Meyer | title=Across East African glaciers: an account of the first ascent of Kilimanjaro | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CsMhAAAAMAAJ | year=1891 | publisher=G. Philip & son}}</ref>{{rp|1–5}}<ref name="Burns2006">{{cite book | author=Cameron M. Burns | title=Kilimanjaro & East Africa: A Climbing and Trekking Guide | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bwZfkrl2ygQC&pg=PA114 | year=2006 | publisher=The Mountaineers Books | isbn=978-0-89886-604-9}}</ref>{{rp|114}}

The German missionaries [[Johannes Rebmann]] of Mombasa and Krapf were the first Europeans to try to reach the snowy mountain. According to English geographer [[Halford Mackinder]] and English explorer [[Harry Johnston]], Rebmann in 1848 was the first European to report the existence of Kilimanjaro.<ref>{{cite journal | last= Mackinder | first= Halford | authorlink= Halford Mackinder | year= 1900 | title= A Journey to the Summit of Mount Kenya, British East Africa | journal= [[The Geographical Journal]] | volume= 15 | issue= 5 | pages= 453–476 | jstor= 1774261}}</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=3jdaAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA879 "Kilimanjaro", authored by Sir. H. H. Johnston, in ''The Twentieth Century'', published by Nineteenth Century and After, printed by Spottswoode, Ballantine & Co. Ltd., London, June 1916, volume 79, page 879]</ref> Hans Meyer has claimed that Rebmann first arrived in Africa in 1846 and has quoted Rebmann's diary entry of 11 May 1848 as saying, "This morning, at 10 o'clock, we obtained a clearer view of the mountains of Jagga, the summit of one of which was covered by what looked like a beautiful white cloud. When I inquired as to the dazzling whiteness, the guide merely called it 'cold' and at once I knew it could be neither more nor less than snow.... Immediately I understood how to interpret the marvelous tales Dr. Krapf and I had heard at the coast, of a vast mountain of gold and silver in the far interior, the approach to which was guarded by evil spirits."<ref name=meyer/>{{rp|6}} In light of these sources, J. Shearson Hyland's assertion that Rebmann first saw the mountain in 1840<ref name="ShearsonHyland"/> appears to be erroneous.

===Climbing history===

====Nineteenth-century explorers====
In August 1861, the Prussian officer Baron [[Karl Klaus von der Decken]] accompanied by English geologist R. Thornton made a first attempt to climb Kibo but "got no farther than {{convert|8,200|feet|meters}} owing to the inclemency of the weather."<ref name=meyer/>{{rp|9}}<ref>{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4S2gRvx5X6sC&pg=PA20 | last=Dundas | first=Charles | year=2012 | origyear=1924 | title=Kilimanjaro and its People: A History of the Wachagga, Their Laws, Customs and Legends, Together with Some Account of the Highest Mountain in Africa | publisher=Routledge | page=20 | accessdate=4 November 2014| isbn=9781136249402 }}</ref> In December 1862, von der Decken tried a second time together with [[Otto Kersten]]. They reached a height of {{convert|14,000|feet|meters}}.<ref name="Verdcourt">{{cite web | url=http://www.conchsoc.org/collectors_east_africa/von-der-Decken-CC.php | title=Baron Carl Claus von der Decken – 1833–1865 – Collectors in East Africa – 31. | publisher=Conchological Society of Great Britain and Ireland | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref>

In August 1871, missionary [[Charles New]] became the "first European to reach the equatorial snows" on Kilimanjaro at an elevation of slightly more than {{convert|13000|ft|m}}.<ref name=meyer/>{{rp|11}}

In June 1887, the Hungarian Count [[Sámuel Teleki]] and Austrian Lieutenant [[Ludwig von Höhnel]] made an attempt to climb the mountain. Approaching from the saddle between Mawenzi and Kibo, Höhnel stopped at {{convert|4,950|meters|feet}}, but Teleki pushed through until he reached the snow at {{convert|5300|meters|feet}}.<ref>{{cite book | author=Ludwig Ritter von Höhnel | title=Discovery of Lakes Rudolf and Stefanie: A Narrative of Count Samuel Teleki's Exploring & Hunting Expedition in Eastern Equatorial Africa in 1887 & 1888 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dGgLAQAAIAAJ&pg=PA196 | year=1894 | publisher=Longmans, Green | page=195}}</ref>

Later in 1887 during his first attempt to climb Kilimanjaro, the German geology professor Hans Meyer reached the lower edge of the ice cap on Kibo, where he was forced to turn back because he lacked the equipment needed to handle the ice.<ref name="Stewart">{{cite book | author=Alex Stewart | title=Kilimanjaro: A Complete Trekker's Guide: Preparations, Practicalities and Trekking Routes to the 'Roof of Africa' | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MOVR23e_Nm8C&pg=PA81 | date=9 September 2010 | publisher=Cicerone Press Limited | isbn=978-1-84965-071-7}}</ref>{{rp|81}} The following year, Meyer planned another attempt with [[Oscar Baumann]], a [[cartographer]], but the mission was aborted after the pair were held hostage and ransomed during the [[Abushiri Revolt]].<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|82}}

In the autumn of 1888, the American naturalist Dr. Abbott and the German explorer [[Otto Ehrenfried Ehlers]] approached the summit from the northwest. While Abbott turned back earlier, Ehlers at first claimed to have reached the summit rim but, after severe criticism of that claim, later withdrew it.<ref name=meyer/>{{rp|17–19}}

In 1889, Meyer returned to Kilimanjaro with the Austrian mountaineer [[Ludwig Purtscheller]] for a third attempt.<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|82}} The success of this attempt was based on the establishment of several campsites with food supplies so that multiple attempts at the top could be made without having to descend too far.<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|82}} Meyer and Purtscheller pushed to near the crater rim on October 3 but turned around exhausted from hacking footsteps in the icy slope.<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|82}} Three days later, on Purtscheller's fortieth birthday, they reached the highest summit on the southern rim of the crater.<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|82}} They were the first to confirm that Kibo has a crater.<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|82}} After descending to the saddle between Kibo and Mawenzi, Meyer and Purtscheller attempted to climb the more technically challenging Mawenzi but could reach only the top of Klute Peak, a subsidiary peak, before retreating due to illness.<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|84}} On October 18, they reascended Kibo to enter and study the crater, cresting the rim at Hans Meyers Notch.<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|84}} In total, Meyer and Purtscheller spent 16 days above {{convert|15000|feet|meters}} during their expedition.<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|84}} They were accompanied in their high camps by Mwini Amani of [[Pangani]], who cooked and supplied the sites with water and firewood.<ref name=meyer/>{{rp|135–186}}

The first ascent of the highest summit of Mawenzi was made on 29 July 1912, by the German climbers [[Eduard Hans Oehler]] and [[Fritz Klute]], who named it Hans Meyer Peak. Oehler and Klute went on to make the third-ever ascent of Kibo, via the [[Drygalski Glacier (Tanzania)|Drygalski Glacier]], and descended via the Western Breach.<ref name="Stewart"/>{{rp|85}}

In 1989, the organizing committee of the 100-year celebration of the first ascent decided to award posthumous certificates to the African porter-guides who had accompanied Meyer and Purtscheller.<ref name="Lauwo">{{cite web | url=http://www.tzaffairs.org/1990/01/meyer-and-purtscheller-were-not-alone/ | title=Meyer And Purtscheller Were Not Alone | publisher=Tanzanian Affairs | date=January 1, 1990 | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref> One person in pictures or documents of the 1889 expedition was thought to match a living inhabitant of [[Marangu]], Yohani Kinyala Lauwo.<ref name="Lauwo"/> Lauwo did not know his own age.<ref name="Lauwo"/> Nor did he remember Meyer or Purtscheller, but he remembered joining a Kilimanjaro expedition involving a Dutch doctor who lived near the mountain and that he did not get to wear shoes during the climb.<ref name="Lauwo"/> Lauwo claimed that he had climbed the mountain three times before the beginning of [[World War I]].<ref name="Lauwo"/> The committee concluded that he had been a member of Meyer's team and therefore must have been born around 1871.<ref name="Lauwo"/> Lauwo died on 10 May 1996, 107 years after the first ascent, but now is sometimes even suggested as co-first-ascendant of Kilimanjaro.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.anotherland.com/africa/hg-0004.htm | title=The Old Man of Mt. Kilimanjaro | publisher=Another Land | work=The Honeyguide: Summer 2000 | accessdate=16 July 2015 | deadurl=yes | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141125114807/http://www.anotherland.com/africa/hg-0004.htm | archivedate=25 November 2014 | df= }}</ref> However, this would imply he lived to the age of [[oldest people|125 years]], so the claim appears unlikely

====Fastest ascent and descent====
The fastest ascent-descent has been recorded by the Swiss-Ecuadorian mountain guide [[Karl Egloff]] (born 16 March 1981 in [[Quito]]), who ran to the top and back in 6 hours and 42 minutes on 13 August 2014.<ref>Matt Hart, [http://www.outsideonline.com/1931036/where-world-did-karl-egloff-come Where in the World Did Karl Egloff Come From?], [[Outside (magazine)|Outside]] 5, Mar 2015</ref> Previous records were held by Spanish mountain runner [[Kílian Jornet Burgada|Kílian Jornet]] (7 hours, 14 minutes on 29 September 2010) and by Tanzanian guide Simon Mtuy (9 hours, 21 minutes on 22 February 2006).<ref name="records">{{cite web | url=http://www.climbkilimanjaroguide.com/kilimanjaro-facts/#kilimanjaro-records | title=Amazing Kilimanjaro Records | publisher=Climb Kilimanjaro Guide | work=Mount Kilimanjaro Facts | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.climbmountkilimanjaro.com/about-the-mountain/record-climbs/ | title=Kilimanjaro records | publisher=Climb Mount Kilimanjaro Ltd | work=Background information on Kilimanjaro | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref>

====Fastest female ascent and descent====
The female ascent record is held by [[Anne-Marie Flammersfeld]]. On 27 July 2015, she climbed to the summit in 8 hours, 32 minutes via the Umbwe Route, which is about {{convert|30|km|mi}} long. Born in Germany but living in Switzerland, she broke the record of Britain's [[Becky Shuttleworth]] who climbed to the summit in 11 hours, 34 minutes on 20 September 2014.<ref name=records/><ref name="Climb">[http://www.climbmountkilimanjaro.com/about-the-mountain/record-climbs "Record climbs", ''Climb Mount Kilimanjaro'', accessed 7 November 2015]</ref>

Flammersfeld then needed 4 hours, 26 minutes to run down to the Mweka Gate, for a combined ascent and descent time of 12 hours, 58 minutes.<ref name="Climb"/> That broke the previous record of 18 hours, 31 minutes held by [[Debbie Bachman]].<ref>[http://www.climbkilimanjaroguide.com/female-speed-record-on-kilimanjaro "NEW FEMALE SPEED RECORD ON KILIMANJARO", ''Climb Kilimanjaro Guide'', accessed 7 November 2015]</ref>

====Youngest and oldest people to summit====
{{unreferenced section|date=April 2017}}
Despite an age-limit of 10 years for a climbing permit, exceptions are occasionally granted. Montannah Kenney, a 7-year-old girl from Texas broke the world record as the youngest female to climb the tallest mountain in Africa in March 2018. Her motivation was the death of her late father.<ref>{{cite web|title=Girl Who Wanted to ‘Be Closer to Her Dad’ Becomes Youngest Female to Hike Mount Kilimanjaro|url=https://www.goodnewsnetwork.org/girl-who-wanted-to-be-closer-to-her-dad-becomes-youngest-female-to-hike-mount-kilimanjaro/|website=Good News Network|accessdate=11 April 2018|date=10 April 2018}}</ref>

Also, Keats Boyd of Los Angeles was only seven years old when he summited Kilimanjaro on 21 January 2008. The oldest person to reach Uhuru Peak was Angela Vorobeva at age 86 years and 267 days. The oldest man to summit the mountain is American Robert Wheeler, who was 85 years and 201 days when he summited on 2 October 2014.

====Ascents by disabled people====
Wheelchair user Bernard Goosen scaled Kilimanjaro in six days in 2007, while in 2012 [[Kyle Maynard]], who has no forearms or lower legs, crawled unassisted to the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro.<ref name=records/>

====Longest Stay at the top of Mt.Kilimanjaro====
[[Madhusudan Patidar]] on 18 December 2017 became the first person in the world who stayed 22 hours at the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro through the western breach route in record 35 hours of climbing.<ref>{{https://m.mensxp.com/special-features/features/46860-the-story-of-a-guy-who-conquered-africa-rsquo-s-highest-mountain-made-a-world-record-inspired-many.html|http://www.freepressjournal.in/indore/indore-city-lad-youngest-indian-to-conquer-mt-kilimanjaro/1192917|http://www.tanzaniatoday.co.tz/news/mps-mowgli-scales-mt-kilimanjaro|
https://m.dailyhunt.in/news/india/english/wittyfeed+india-epaper-witty/meet+the+guy+who+stayed+on+the+top+of+kilimanjaro+for+22hrs+and+made+world+record-newsid-79143516}}</ref>

==Trekking==
{{Main|Mount Kilimanjaro climbing routes}}
[[File:Kilimanjaro 3D - version 1.gif|thumb|A 3D model of Kibo]]

===Overview===
[[Kilimanjaro National Park]] generated US $51 million in revenue in 2013,<ref name="MusaHigham2015">{{cite book | editor1=Ghazali Musa | editor2=James Higham | editor3=Anna Thompson-Carr | title=Mountaineering Tourism | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gFnLCQAAQBAJ&pg=PA285 | date=5 June 2015 | publisher=Routledge | isbn=978-1-317-66874-9}}</ref>{{rp|285}} the second-most of any Tanzanian national park.<ref name="Christie">{{cite book | author1=Ian Christie | author2=Eneida Fernandes | author3=Hannah Messerli | author4=Louise Twining-Ward | title=Tourism in Africa: Harnessing Tourism for Growth and Improved Livelihoods | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2nEFBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA257 | year=2014 | publisher=World Bank Publications | isbn=9781464801976}}</ref>{{rp|258}} (The [[Ngorongoro Conservation Area]], which includes the heavily visited Ngorongoro Crater, is not a national park.) The Tanzania National Parks Authority reported that the park recorded 57,456 tourists during the 2011–12 budget year, of whom 16,425 hiked the mountain, which was well below the capacity of 28,470 as specified in the park's General Management Plan.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.tanzaniaparks.com/news/number_of_kili_climbers_not_a_threat.html|title=The official site of the Tanzania National Parks - Latest news|date=16 March 2014|website=archive.org|accessdate=23 October 2017|deadurl=yes|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924113218/http://www.tanzaniaparks.com/news/number_of_kili_climbers_not_a_threat.html|archivedate=24 September 2015|df=}}</ref> The mountain climbers generated irregular and seasonal jobs for about 11,000 guides, porters, and cooks in 2007,<ref name="Mitchell">{{cite web|url=http://www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk/files/odi-assets/publications-opinion-files/4203.pdf|title="Making success work for the poor: Package tourism in Northern Tanzania", Overseas Development Institute, authored by Jonathan Mitchell, Jodie Keane, and Jenny Laidlaw, 9 January 2008, accessed 31 July 2015|website=odi.org|accessdate=23 October 2017}}</ref> although serious concerns have been raised about their poor working conditions and inadequate wages.<ref name="MusaHigham2015"/>{{rp|287–291}}<ref name="Christie"/>{{rp|259}}<ref name="Mitchell"/>

There are seven official trekking routes by which to ascend and descend Kilimanjaro: Lemosho, Machame, Marangu, Mweka, Rongai, Shira, and Umbwe.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.mountkilimanjaroguide.com/kilimanjaro-routes.html | title=Mt. Kilimanjaro Routes: The Advantages and Disadvantage of All Mount Kilimanjaro Climbing Routes | publisher=Mount Kilimanjaro Guide | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref> Of all the routes, Machame is widely proclaimed as the most scenic, albeit steeper, route. This was true until the opening of Lemosho and Northern Circuit routes, which are equally scenic if not more. The Machame route can be done in six or seven days,<ref name="Machame">{{cite web|url=https://blog.alienadv.com/Kilimanjaro-Routes-complete-guide-2017/|title=Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro on the Machame Route|last=|first=|date=|website=|publisher=Mount Kilimanjaro Guide|accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref> Lemosho can be done in six to eight days, and the Northern Circuit routes can be done in seven or more days. The Rongai is the easiest and least scenic of all camping routes.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.mountkilimanjaroguide.com/kilimanjaro-rongai.html | title=Climbing Mount Kilimanjaro on the Rongai Route | publisher=Mount Kilimanjaro Guide | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref> The Marangu is also relatively easy, but this route tends to be very busy, the ascent and descent routes are the same, and accommodation is in shared huts with all other climbers.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.kilimanjaroroutes.com/Marangu%20Route.htm | title=Marangu Route | publisher=Kilimanjaro Routes | accessdate=16 July 2015}}</ref>

People who wish to trek to the summit of Kilimanjaro are advised to undertake appropriate research<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://www.expeditionkilimanjaro.com/preparation.php | title=Prepare yourself for the Kilimanjaro climb | author=R. Stoppelenburg}}</ref> and ensure that they are both properly equipped and physically capable. Though the climb is technically not as challenging as when climbing the high peaks of the [[Himalayas]] or [[Andes]], the high elevation, low temperature, and occasional high winds make this a difficult and dangerous trek. Acclimatization is essential, and even the most experienced trekkers suffer some degree of [[altitude sickness]].<ref name=Acclimatization>{{Cite journal |author1=Muza, SR |author2=Fulco, CS |author3=Cymerman, A | title=Altitude Acclimatization Guide | journal=US Army Research Inst. of Environmental Medicine Thermal and Mountain Medicine Division Technical Report | issue=USARIEM-TN-04-05 | year=2004 | url=http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/7616 | accessdate=2009-03-05}}</ref>

<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">
File:Kili warning signs px1000.jpg|Caution signs at the Machamé trailhead
File:UhuruPeak.jpg|Sign at Uhuru peak, indicating to trekkers that they have reached the top
File:Hans Meyer memorial.jpg|Memorial recognizing the German [[Hans Meyer (geologist)|Hans Meyer]] as the first European to "conquer" Kilimanjaro
</gallery>

[[File:Moshi panorama edit1.jpg|thumb|center|700px|Kilimanjaro as seen from the [[Moshi, Tanzania|Moshi]] municipality in the [[Kilimanjaro Region]]]]

===Dangers===
A small study of people attempting to reach the summit of Kilimanjaro in July and August 2005 found that 61.3 percent succeeded and 77 percent experienced acute mountain sickness (AMS).<ref name="DaviesKalson2009">{{cite journal | url=http://www.nickkalson.com/Papers/Kili_WEM.pdf | last1=Davies | first1=Andrew J. | last2=Kalson | first2=Nicholas S. | last3=Stokes | first3=Suzy | last4=Earl | first4=Mark D. | last5=Whitehead | first5=Adam G. | last6=Frost | first6=Hannah | last7=Tyrell-Marsh | first7=Ian | last8=Naylor | first8=Jon | title=Determinants of Summiting Success and Acute Mountain Sickness on Mt Kilimanjaro (5895 m) | journal=Wilderness & Environmental Medicine | volume=20 | issue=4 | year=2009 | page=315 | issn=1080-6032 | doi=10.1580/1080-6032-020.004.0311}}</ref> A retrospective study of 917 persons who attempted to reach the summit via the Lemosho or Machame routes found that 70.4 percent experienced AMS, defined in this study to be headache, nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, or loss of appetite.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/David_Irwin3/publication/267102897_A_Retrospective_Study_of_Acute_Mountain_Sickness_on_Mt._Kilimanjaro_Using_Trekking_Company_Data/links/54da49c70cf233119bc29c23.pdf | last1=Eigenberger | first1=Paul | last2=Faino | first2=Anna | last3=Maltzahn | first3=Joanne | last4=Lisk | first4=Christina | last5=Frank | first5=Eddie | last6=Frank | first6=Amy | last7=Loomis | first7=Zoe | last8=Schroeder | first8=Thies | last9=Strand | first9=Matthew | last10=Irwin | first10=David | title=A retrospective study of acute mountain sickness on Mt. Kilimanjaro using trekking company data | journal=Aviation, Space, and Environmental Medicine | volume=85 | number=11 | year=2014 | page=1126}}</ref>

Kilimanjaro's summit is well above the altitude at which life-threatening [[high altitude pulmonary edema]] (HAPE) or [[high altitude cerebral edema]] (HACE), the most severe forms of AMS, can occur.<ref name=MedicalProblems>{{Cite journal |author1=Cymerman, A |author2=Rock, PB | title=Medical Problems in High Mountain Environments. A Handbook for Medical Officers | publisher=US Army Research Inst. of Environmental Medicine Thermal and Mountain Medicine Division Technical Report | volume=USARIEM-TN94-2 | url=http://archive.rubicon-foundation.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/7976 | accessdate=2009-03-05}}</ref> These health risks are increased substantially by excessively fast climbing schedules motivated by high daily national park fees, busy holiday travel schedules, and the lack of permanent shelter on most routes.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://www.nickkalson.com/Papers/Kili_WEM.pdf | title=Determinants of Summiting Success and Acute Mountain Sickness on Mt Kilimanjaro (5895 m) |author1=Andrew J. Davies |author2=Nicholas S. Kalson |author3=Suzy Stokes |author4=Mark D. Earl |author5=Adam G. Whitehead |author6=Hannah Frost |author7=Ian Tyrell-Marsh |author8=Jon Naylor | journal=Wilderness and Environmental Medicine | year=2009 | volume=20 | issue=4 | pages=311–317 | doi=10.1580/1080-6032-020.004.0311}}</ref>

A daily dose of 250 milligrams of [[acetazolamide]] is associated with a 48 percent relative-risk reduction of AMS compared to placebo, with a higher dose not providing additional protection but causing more adverse side effects.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1708-8305.2012.00629.x/full | title=Acetazolamide for the Prevention of Acute Mountain Sickness—A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis |author1=Neil D. Ritchie |author2=Amy V. Baggott |author3=W. T. Andrew Todd |last-author-amp=yes | journal=Journal of Travel Medicine | year=2012 | volume=19 | issue=5 | pages=298–307 | doi=10.1111/j.1708-8305.2012.00629.x| pmid=22943270 }}</ref> The six-day Machame route, which involves one night of "sleeping low", may delay the onset of AMS but does not ultimately prevent its occurrence.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://online.liebertpub.com/doi/abs/10.1089/ham.2012.1024 | title=Twice-Daily Assessment of Trekkers on Kilimanjaro's Machame Route to Evaluate the Incidence and Time-Course of Acute Mountain Sickness | author=Joel Meyer | journal=High Altitude Medicine & Biology | year=2012 | volume=13 | issue=4 | pages=281–284 | doi=10.1089/ham.2012.1024}}</ref>

Falls on steep portions of the mountain and rock slides have killed trekkers. For this reason, the route via the [[Arrow Glacier]] was closed for several years, reopening in December 2007.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://goafrica.about.com/od/tanzania/ig/Climbing-Mount-Kilimanjaro/Barranco-Route--Kilimanjaro.htm | title=Lava Tower en route to Barranco Camp | accessdate=23 March 2011 | work=Africa Travel | publisher=''About.com''}}</ref>

Due to the improper disposal of human waste in the mountain environment there is high risk of health hazards.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Apollo | first1 = M | year = 2017 | title = The good, the bad and the ugly–three approaches to management of human waste in a high-mountain environment | url = http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00207233.2016.1227225 | journal = International Journal of Environmental Studies | volume = 74 | issue = 1| pages = 129–158 | doi=10.1080/00207233.2016.1227225}}</ref> Human faeces are very dangerous; they contain over 100 bacteria, protozoans and viruses that, without a specialised recycling process, pose a threat to both animals and human beings.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Cilimburg | first1 = A. | last2 = Monz | first2 = C. | last3 = Kehoe | first3 = S. | year = 2000 | title = Wildland recreation and human waste: a review of problems, practices, and concerns | url = | journal = Environmental Management | volume = 25 | issue = 6| pages = 587–598 | doi=10.1007/s002670010046| pmid = 10790524 }}</ref> Only boiled or chemically treated water is accepted for drinking. Decent changes have appeared in recent years–management bodies care more about human waste disposal. The authorities in mountain regions are gradually exchanging the old, leaking toilets for newer, eco–friendly models.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Apollo|first=Michal|date=2016-10-01|title=Mountaineer’s Waste: Past, Present and Future|url=https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/avutgs.2016.16.issue-2/avutgs-2016-0002/avutgs-2016-0002.xml|journal=Annals of Valahia University of Targoviste, Geographical Series|language=en|volume=16|issue=2|doi=10.1515/avutgs-2016-0002|issn=2393-1493}}</ref>

===Deaths===
According to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre in Moshi, 25 people died from January 1996 to October 2003 while climbing the mountain. Seventeen were female and eight were male, ranging in age from 29 to 74. Fourteen died from advanced high altitude illness, including one with [[HACE]], five with [[HAPE]], and six with both HACE and HAPE. The remaining eleven deaths resulted from trauma (three), [[myocardial infarction]] (four), [[pneumonia]] (two), cardio-pulmonary failure of other underlying cause (one), and acute [[appendicitis]] (one). The overall mortality rate was an estimated 13.6 per 100,000 climbers (0.0136 percent).<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://wodocs.com/docum/1474-international_society_for_mountain_medicine-viwcmm_abstracts-32.html | title=Deaths Due to High Altitude Illness Among Tourists Climbing Mt Kilimanjaro | authors=Markus Hauser, Andreas Mueller, Britta Swai, Sendui Ole Nguyaine | journal=Proceedings of the 2004 South African Travel Medicine Society | year=2004}}</ref>

==Mapping==
A map of the Kibo cone on Mount Kilimanjaro was published by the British government's [[Directorate of Overseas Surveys]] in 1964 based on aerial photography conducted in 1962 (Subset of Kilimanjaro, East Africa (Tanganyika) Series Y742, Sheet 56/2, D.O.S. 422 1964, Edition 1, Scale 1:50,000).<ref>{{cite conference | url=http://www.fig.net/resources/proceedings/fig_proceedings/fig2014/papers/ts08b/TS08B_sirguey_cullen_6959.pdf | title=A Century of Photogrammetry on Kilimanjaro | accessdate=16 July 2015 |author1=Pascal SRIGUEY |author2=Nicolas J. CULLEN |lastauthoramp=yes | booktitle=Engaging the Challenges – Enhancing the Relevance | year=2014 | conference=FIG Congress 2014 | location=Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia}}</ref>

Tourist mapping was first published by the [[Ordnance Survey]] in England in 1989 based on the original DOS mapping (1:100,000, 100&nbsp;ft intervals, DOS 522).<ref name="Stewart2012">{{cite book | author=Alex Stewart | title=Kilimanjaro: A Complete Trekker's Guide: Preparations, practicalities and trekking routes to the 'Roof of Africa' | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=28N6F2wBSM8C&pg=PA33 | date=23 April 2012 | publisher=Cicerone Press Limited | isbn=978-1-84965-622-1 | page=33}}</ref> West Col Productions produced a map with tourist information in 1990 (1:75,000, 100 metre contour intervals, inset maps of Kibo and Mawenzi on 1:20,000 and 1:30,000 scales respectively and 50 metre contour interval).<ref name="Stewart2012"/> In the last few years, numerous other maps have become available of various qualities.<ref name=map/>

==Vegetation==
[[File:Forest in Marangu route in Kilimanjaro area 001.JPG|thumb|left|The Cloud forest on the Marangu route on the south eastern slope.]]
Natural forests cover about {{convert|1000|km2|acre}} on Kilimanjaro.<ref name="PlantEcology">{{cite journal | url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Hemp_Andreas/publication/227311322_Continuum_or_zonation_Altitudinal_gradients_in_the_forest_vegetation_of_Mt._Kilimanjaro/links/543b57b60cf24a6ddb976f7e.pdf | title=Continuum or zonation? Altitudinal gradients in the forest vegetation of Mt. Kilimanjaro | author=Andreas Hemp | journal=Plant Ecology | year=2006 | volume=184 | issue=1 | pages=27–42 | doi=10.1007/s11258-005-9049-4}}</ref> In the foothill area [[maize]], beans, and [[sunflower]]s (on the western side also wheat) are cultivated. Remnants of the former [[savanna]] vegetation with ''[[Acacia]]'', ''[[Combretum]]'', ''[[Terminalia]]'' and ''[[Grewia]]'' also occur. Between {{convert|1000|m|ft}} and {{convert|1800|m|ft}}, coffee also appears as part of the "[[Chaga people|Chagga]] home gardens" [[agroforestry]]. Native vegetation at this altitude range (''[[Strombosia]]'', ''[[Newtonia (plant)|Newtonia]]'', and ''[[Entandrophragma]]'') is limited to inaccessible valleys and gorges<ref name="MaundiCrater">{{cite journal | url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0277379112000637 | title=Vegetation, climate and fire-dynamics in East Africa inferred from the Maundi crater pollen record from Mt Kilimanjaro during the last glacial–interglacial cycle |author1=Lisa Schüler |author2=Andreas Hemp |author3=Wolfgang Zech |author4=Hermann Behling | journal=Quaternary Science Reviews | year=2012 | volume=39 | pages=1–13 | doi=10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.02.003 | via=ScienceDirect| bibcode=2012QSRv...39....1S }}</ref> and is completely different from vegetation at higher altitudes. On the southern slope [[montane forest]]s first contain ''[[Ocotea usambarensis]]'' as well as [[fern]]s and [[epiphyte]]s, farther up in [[cloud forest]]s ''[[Podocarpus latifolius]]'', ''[[Hagenia abyssinica]]'' and ''[[Erica excelsa]]'' grow as well as fog-dependent mosses. On the drier northern slopes [[olive]], ''[[Croton (plant)|Croton]]''-''[[Calodendrum]]'', ''[[Cassipourea]]'', and ''[[Juniperus]]'' form forests in order of increasing altitude. Between {{convert|3100|m|ft}} and {{convert|3900|m|ft}} lie ''[[Erica]]'' bush and heathlands, followed by ''[[Helichrysum]]'' until {{convert|4500|m|ft}}.<ref name="PlantEcology2"/><ref>{{cite book | author1=L. A. Bruijnzeel | author2=F. N. Scatena | author3=L. S. Hamilton | title=Tropical Montane Cloud Forests: Science for Conservation and Management | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N6FkwMnSX8EC&pg=PA134 | date=6 January 2011 | publisher=Cambridge University Press | isbn=978-1-139-49455-7 | pages=136}}</ref> [[Neophyte (botany)|Neophytes]] have been observed, including ''[[Poa annua]]''.<ref name="PlantEcology2">{{cite journal | url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Hemp_Andreas/publication/227232425_Introduced_plants_on_Kilimanjaro_tourism_and_its_impact/links/0a85e53be4703e41aa000000.pdf | title=Introduced plants on Kilimanjaro: tourism and its impact | author=Andreas Hemp | journal=Plant Ecology | year=2007 | volume=197 | issue=1 | pages=17–29 | doi=10.1007/s11258-007-9356-z}}</ref>

Records from the Maundi crater at {{convert|2780|m|ft}} indicate that the vegetation of Kilimanjaro has varied over time. Forest vegetation retreated during the Last Glacial Maximum and the ericaceous vegetation belt lowered by {{convert|1500|m|ft}} between 42,000 and 30,000 years ago because of the drier and colder conditions.<ref name="MaundiCrater"/>

The Tussock Grassland is an area on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro that contains many unique species of vegetation like the [[water holding cabbage]].

==Animal life==
[[File:Elephants at Amboseli national park against Mount Kilimanjaro.jpg|thumb|Elephants at the [[Amboseli National Park]] against Mount Kilimanjaro]]
Large animals are rare on Kilimanjaro and are more frequent in the forests and lower parts of the mountain. [[African bush elephant|Elephants]] and [[African buffalo|Cape buffaloes]] are among the animals that can be potentially hazardous to trekkers. [[Bushbuck]]s, [[chameleon]]s, [[dik-dik]]s, [[common duiker|duikers]], [[mongoose]]s, [[sunbird]]s, and [[Common warthog|warthogs]] have been reported as well. [[Zebra]]s and [[hyena]]s have sporadically been observed on the Shira plateau.<ref>{{cite book | author=Cameron M. Burns | title=Kilimanjaro & East Africa: A Climbing and Trekking Guide | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bwZfkrl2ygQC&pg=PA7 | year=2006 | publisher=The Mountaineers Books | isbn=978-0-89886-604-9 | page=50}}</ref>

Specific species associated with the mountain include the [[Kilimanjaro shrew]]<ref>{{cite web | url=http://oldredlist.iucnredlist.org/details/5577/0 | title=Crocidura monax | publisher=International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources | work=IUCN Red List of Threatened Species | accessdate=August 15, 2015}}</ref> and the chameleon ''[[Kinyongia tavetana]]''.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://reptile-database.reptarium.cz/species?genus=Kinyongia&species=tavetana | title=Kinyongia tavetana (STEINDACHNER, 1891) | publisher=Zoological Museum Hamburg | work=The Reptile Database | accessdate=15 August 2015}}</ref>

==Climate==
The climate of Kilimanjaro is influenced by the height of the mountain, which allows the simultaneous influence of the equatorial [[trade wind]]s and the high altitude [[anti-trades]], and the isolated position of the mountain. Kilimanjaro has [[Mountain breeze and valley breeze|daily upslope and nightly downslope winds]], a regimen stronger on the southern than the northern side of the mountain. The flatter southern flanks are more extended and affect the atmosphere more strongly.<ref name="AnAscentOfKilimanjaro"/>{{rp|3–4}}

Kilimanjaro has two distinct rainy seasons, one from March to May and another around November. The northern slopes receive much less rainfall than the southern ones.<ref name="PlantEcology"/> The lower southern slope receives {{convert|800|to|900|mm|in}} annually, rising to {{convert|1500|to|2000|mm|in}} at {{convert|1500|m|ft}} altitude and peaking "partly over" {{convert|3000|mm|in}} in the forest belt at {{convert|2000|to|2300|m|ft}}. In the alpine zone, annual precipitation decreases to {{convert|200|mm|in}}.<ref name="PlantEcology2"/>{{rp|18}}

The average temperature in the summit area is approximately {{convert|-7|C|F}}. Nighttime surface temperatures on the [[Northern Ice Field (Mount Kilimanjaro)|Northern Ice Field]] (NIF) fall on average to {{convert|-9|C|F}} with an average daytime high temperature of {{convert|-4|C|F}}. During nights of extreme [[radiative cooling|radiational cooling]], the NIF can cool to as low as {{convert|-15|to|-27|C|F}}.<ref name="SinghSingh2011">{{cite book | author1=Vijay P. Singh | author2=Pratap Singh | author3=Umesh K. Haritashya | title=Encyclopedia of Snow, Ice and Glaciers | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mKKtQR4T-1MC&pg=PA673 | date=1 July 2011 | publisher=Springer Science & Business Media | isbn=978-90-481-2641-5}}</ref>{{rp|674}}

Snowfall can occur any time of year but is associated mostly with northern Tanzania's two rainy seasons (November–December and March–May).<ref name="SinghSingh2011"/>{{rp|673}} Precipitation in the summit area occurs principally as snow and [[graupel]] ({{convert|250|to|500|mm|in}} per year) and ablates within days or years.<ref name="TraceElements"/>

=== Climate zones ===
* Bushland, 800 m – 1,800 m (2,600&nbsp;ft – 5,900&nbsp;ft);
* Rainweald, 1,800 m – 2,800 m (5,900&nbsp;ft – 9,200&nbsp;ft);
* Heath and Moorland, 2,800 m – 4,000 m (9,200&nbsp;ft – 13,100&nbsp;ft);
* Highland Barrens, 4,000 m – 5,000 m (13,100&nbsp;ft– 16,400&nbsp;ft);
* Ice Cap, 5,000 m – 5,895 m (16,400&nbsp;ft – 19,341&nbsp;ft).

== Glaciers ==
[[File:Kilimanjaro-1938-uwm.png|thumb|Aerial view of the Kibo summit of Kilimanjaro in 1938.]]
Kibo's diminishing ice cap exists because Kilimanjaro is a little-dissected, massive mountain that rises above the [[snow line]]. The cap is divergent and outwards splits up into individual glaciers. The central portion of the ice cap is interrupted by the presence of the Kibo crater.<ref name="AnAscentOfKilimanjaro"/>{{rp|5}} The summit glaciers and ice fields do not display significant horizontal movements because their low thickness precludes major deformation.<ref name="TraceElements"/>

Geological evidence shows five successive glacial episodes during the [[Quaternary]] period, namely First (500,000 [[Before Present|BP]]), Second (greater than 360,000 years ago to 240,000 BP), Third (150,000 to 120,000 BP), Fourth (also known as "Main") (20,000 to 17,000 BP), and Little (16,000 to 14,000 BP). The Third may have been the most extensive, and the Little appears to be statistically indistinguishable from the Fourth.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Bryan_Mark/publication/227643102_Quaternary_glaciation_in_Africa_key_chronologies_and_climatic_implications/links/00b7d52d451e477c9b000000.pdf | title=Quaternary glaciation in Africa: Key chronologies and climatic implications |author1=Bryan G. Mark |author2=Henry A. Osmaston |lastauthoramp=yes | journal=Journal of Quaternary Science | year=2008 | volume=23 | issue=6–7 | pages=589–608 | doi=10.1002/jqs.1222| bibcode=2008JQS....23..589M }}</ref>

A continuous ice cap covering approximately {{convert|400|km2|mi2}} down to an elevation of {{convert|3200|m|ft}} covered Kilimanjaro during the [[Last Glacial Maximum]] in the [[Pleistocene]] epoch (the Main glacial episode), extending across the summits of Kibo and Mawenzi.<ref name="Kaser"/><ref name="Glaciers of Middle East"/> Because of the exceptionally prolonged dry conditions during the subsequent [[Younger Dryas]] [[stadial]], the ice fields on Kilimanjaro may have become extinct 11,500 years BP.<ref name="TraceElements">{{cite journal | url=https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Natalie_Kehrwald/publication/261331494_Deglaciated_areas_of_Kilimanjaro_as_a_source_of_volcanic_trace_elements_deposited_on_the_ice_cap_during_the_late_Holocene/links/0f317533e6b1d43308000000.pdf | title=Deglaciated areas of Kilimanjaro as a source of volcanic trace elements deposited on the ice cap during the late Holocene |author1=P. Gabrielli |author2=D. R. Hardy |author3=N. Kehrwald |author4=M. Davis |author5=G. Cozzi |author6=C. Turetta |author7=C. Barbante |author8=L. G. Thompson | journal=Quaternary Science Reviews | year=2014 | volume=93 | issue=1 | pages=1–10 | doi=10.1016/j.quascirev.2014.03.007| bibcode=2014QSRv...93....1G }}</ref> [[Ice core]]s taken from Kilimanjaro's Northern Ice Field (NIF) indicates that the glaciers there have a "basal age" of about 11,700 years,<ref>{{cite web | last=Thompson | first=Lonnie G | title=Kilimanjaro Ice Core Records: Evidence of Holocene Climate Change in Tropical Africa | url=http://www.geo.umass.edu/climate/doug/pubs/thompson_etal_sci02.pdf | publisher=Science Magazine | accessdate=16 August 2012}}</ref> although an analysis of ice taken in 2011 from exposed vertical cliffs in the NIF supports an age extending only to 800 years BP.<ref>[http://adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2015EGUGA..17.5091U&link_type=ARTICLE "The controversial age of Kilimanjaro's plateau glaciers", ''Geophysical Research Abstracts'', authored by Chiara Uglietti, Alexander Zapf, Sönke Szidat, Gary Salazar, Doug Hardy, Margit Schwikowski, EGU General Assembly 2015, 12–17 April 2015, Vienna, Austria, accessed 9 November 2015]</ref>

Higher precipitation rates at the beginning of the [[Holocene]] epoch (11,500 years BP) allowed the ice cap to reform.<ref name="TraceElements"/> The glaciers survived a widespread drought during a three century period beginning around 4,000 years BP.<ref name="TraceElements"/><ref name="unabated">{{cite journal |author1=L. G. Thompson |author2=H. H. Brecher |author3=E. Mosley-Thompson |author4=D. R. Hardy |author5=B. G. Mark | title=Glacier loss on Kilimanjaro continues unabated | journal=[[Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences]] | volume=106 | issue=47 | pages=19770–5 | year=2009 | doi=10.1073/pnas.0906029106 | url=http://www.pnas.org/content/106/47/19770.full | pmid=19884500 | pmc=2771743|bibcode=2009PNAS..10619770T }}</ref>

[[File:Kibo-großer Gletscher(big glacier).jpg|thumb|left|Vertical margin wall of the [[Rebmann Glacier]] in 2005 with [[Mount Meru (Tanzania)|Mount Meru]] in the background.]]
In the late 1880s, the summit of Kibo was completely covered by an ice cap covering about {{convert|20|km2|mi2}} with outlet glaciers cascading down the western and southern slopes, and except for the inner cone, the entire caldera was buried. Glacier ice also flowed through the Western Breach.<ref name="Kaser"/><ref name="Glaciers of Middle East">{{cite web | last=Young | first=James A. T. | title=Glaciers of the Middle East and Africa | url=http://pubs.usgs.gov/pp/p1386g/africa.pdf | work=U.S. Geological Professional Survey | publisher=U.S. Department of the Interior | pages=G61, G58, G59 G62 | accessdate=16 August 2012}}</ref>

The slope glaciers retreated rapidly between 1912 and 1953, in response to a sudden shift in climate at the end of the 19th century that made them "drastically out of equilibrium", and more slowly thereafter. Their continuing demise indicates they are still out of equilibrium in response to a constant change in climate over the last 100 years.<ref name="Kaser"/>

In contrast to the persistent slope glaciers, the glaciers on Kilimanjaro's crater plateau have appeared and disappeared repeatedly during the Holocene epoch, with each cycle lasting a few hundred years.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.211.435&rep=rep1&type=pdf | last1=Kaser | first1=Georg | last2=Mölg | first2=Thomas | last3=Cullen | first3=Nicolas J. | last4=Hardy | first4=Douglas R. | last5=Winkler | first5=Michael | title=Is the decline of ice on Kilimanjaro unprecedented in the Holocene? | journal=The Holocene | volume=20 | issue=7 | year=2010 | pages=1079–1091 | issn=0959-6836 | doi=10.1177/0959683610369498| bibcode=2010Holoc..20.1079K }}</ref>{{rp|1088}} It appears that decreasing specific humidity instead of temperature changes has caused the shrinkage of the slope glaciers since the late 19th century. No clear warming trend at the elevation of those glaciers occurred between 1948 and 2005. Although air temperatures at that elevation are always below freezing, solar radiation causes melting on their vertical faces. "There is no pathway for the plateau glaciers other than to continuously retreat once their vertical margins are exposed to solar radiation."<ref name="Kaser"/> Vertical ice margin walls are a unique characteristic of the summit glaciers and a major place of the shrinkage of the glaciers. They manifest stratifications, [[Ice calving|calving]], and other ice features.<ref name="SinghSingh2011"/>

[[File:Kilimanjaro sunrise at GillmanPoint(1).jpg|thumb|A vertical glacier margin wall as seen from Gilman's Point on the crater rim at a sunrise in 1998]]
Almost 85 percent of the ice cover on Kilimanjaro disappeared from October 1912 to June 2011, with coverage decreasing from {{convert|11.40|km2|mi2}} to {{convert|1.76|km2|mi2}}.<ref name="Retreat">{{cite journal | url=http://www.the-cryosphere.net/7/419/2013/tc-7-419-2013.pdf | last1=Cullen | first1=N. J. | last2=Sirguey | first2=P. | last3=Mölg | first3=T. | last4=Kaser | first4=G. | last5=Winkler | first5=M. | last6=Fitzsimons | first6=S. J. | title=A century of ice retreat on Kilimanjaro: the mapping reloaded | journal=The Cryosphere | volume=7 | issue=2 | year=2013 | pages=419–431 | issn=1994-0424 | doi=10.5194/tc-7-419-2013| bibcode=2013TCry....7..419C }}</ref>{{rp|423}} From 1912 to 1953, there was about a 1.1 percent average annual loss.<ref name="unabated"/> The average annual loss for 1953 to 1989 was 1.4 percent while the loss rate for 1989 to 2007 was 2.5 percent.<ref name="unabated"/> Of the ice cover still present in 2000, almost 40 percent had disappeared by 2011.<ref name="Retreat"/>{{rp|425}} The glaciers are thinning in addition to losing areal coverage,<ref name="unabated"/> and do not have active accumulation zones with retreat occurring on all glacier surfaces. Loss of glacier mass is caused by both melting and [[sublimation (phase transition)|sublimation]].<ref name="TraceElements"/> While the current shrinking and thinning of Kilimanjaro's ice fields appears to be unique within its almost twelve millennium history, it is contemporaneous with widespread [[Retreat of glaciers since 1850|glacier retreat]] in mid-to-low latitudes across the globe.<ref name="unabated"/> At the current rate, most of the ice on Kilimanjaro will disappear by 2040 and "it is highly unlikely that any ice body will remain after 2060".<ref name="Retreat"/>{{rp|430}}

A complete disappearance of the ice would be of only "negligible importance" to the water budget of the area around the mountain. The forests of Kilimanjaro, far below the ice fields, "are [the] essential water reservoirs for the local and regional populations".<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://lindseynicholson.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/Moelg-et-al.-2013.pdf | title=East African glacier loss and climate change: Corrections to the UNEP article ‘‘Africa without ice and snow’’ |author1=Georg Kaser |author2=Thomas Mölg |author3=Nicolas J. Cullen |author4=Douglas R. Hardy |author5=Michael Winkler |author6=Rainer Prinz |author7=Lindsey Nicholson |last-author-amp=yes | volume=6 | pages=1–6}}</ref>

The Kilimanjaro glaciers have been used for deriving ice core records, including two from the southern icefield. Based on this data, this icefield formed between 1,250 and 1,450 years BP.<ref>{{cite journal | url=http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/B0444527478003513 | title=Ice Core Records – Africa |author1=L. G. Thompson |author2=M. E. Davis | journal=Encyclopedia of Quaternary Science | year=2007 | pages=1220–1225 | doi=10.1016/B0-44-452747-8/00351-3| isbn=9780444527479 }}</ref>

==Mythology==
Local legends by the Chagga people tell how a man named Tone once provoked a god, Ruwa, to bring famine upon the land. The people became angry at Tone, forcing him to flee. Nobody wanted to protect him but a solitary dweller who had stones that turned miraculously into cattle. The dweller bid that Tone never open the stable of the cattle. When Tone did not heed the warning and the cattle escaped, Tone followed them, but the fleeing cattle threw up hills to run on, including Mawenzi and Kibo. Tone finally collapsed on Kibo, ending the pursuit.

Another legend has it that Kibo and Mawenzi were good neighbours, until Mawenzi played a prank on Kibo and threw away embers he had received from Kibo and claimed that they had burned out. Kibo eventually got angry and beat Mawenzi badly, explaining why the mountain is so badly degraded. This theory explains Mawenzi's name as "the Battered".

Other legends tell of ivory-filled graves of elephants on the mountain, and of a cow named Rayli that produces miraculous fat from her tail glands. If a man tries to steal such a gland but is too slow in his moves, Rayli will blast a powerful snort and blow the thief hurling down into the plain.<ref>{{cite book|author=Charles Dundas|title=Kilimanjaro and Its People: A History of Wachagga, their Laws, Customs and Legends, Together with Some|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4S2gRvx5X6sC&pg=PA36|date=12 November 2012|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-24940-2|pages=84–88}}</ref>

==In popular culture==
* ''[[Under Kilimanjaro]]'' is a non-fiction novel by [[Ernest Hemingway]] about his travels in the region.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://upress.kent.edu/books/Hemingway.htm | title=An American Literary Treasure | publisher=Kent State University Press | accessdate=2009-10-22}}</ref>
* ''[[Sia lives on Kilimanjaro]]'' is a children's book by [[Astrid Lindgren]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Sia Bor På Kilimandjaro. Sia Lives on Kilimanjaro. Photographs by Anna Riwkin-Brick. Text by A. Lindgren|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8FgUMwEACAAJ|year=1959|publisher=London; Stockholm printed}}</ref>
* [[The Snows of Kilimanjaro (short story)|''The Snows of Kilimanjaro'']] is a short story by Hemingway that references Kilimanjaro.<ref>{{cite book | author=Ernest Hemingway | title=The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Other Stories | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QjgiXnMHHtIC | year=1995 | publisher=Simon and Schuster | isbn=978-0-684-80444-6}}</ref> The story was adapted into a [[The Snows of Kilimanjaro (1952 film)|film]] in 1952.<ref>{{cite web | title=Notes - The Snows of Kilimanjaro | work= AFI Catalog | url= http://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/90638/The-Snows-of-Kilimanjaro/notes.html | publisher= [[Turner Classic Movies]] | accessdate=16 June 2013}}</ref>
* In the 2006 film ''[[An Inconvenient Truth]]'', former United States vice president [[Al Gore]] stated, "Within the decade, there will be no more snows of Kilimanjaro."<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/21/travel/21iht-explorer.9371273.html | title=Mount Kilimanjaro: On Africa's roof, still crowned with snow | work=The New York Times | date=21 January 2008 | agency=The New York Times Company | accessdate=26 June 2015 | author=Neil Modie | subscription=yes}}</ref>
* ''[[Filles de Kilimanjaro]]'', a 1968 album by [[Miles Davis]].
* Kilimanjaro is mentioned in the 1982 song "[[Africa (Toto song)|Africa]]" by [[Toto (band)|Toto]]. The lyrics state that the mountain "rises like Olympus above the Serengeti", which is actually located far to the northwest of Kilimanjaro.
* In the 1994 Disney film ''[[The Lion King]]'', Kilimanjaro can be seen in the background during the opening musical sequence, "[[Circle of Life]]", as the film was set in Tanzania.
* Popular British YouTuber [[KSI (entertainer)|KSI]] made a song in 2015 called Kilimanjaro.
* Mount Kilimanjaro that features in ''[[Madagascar (2005 film)|Madagascar]]'' sequel, ''[[Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa]]''.
* In the ''[[Halo (series)|Halo]]'' video game series, a medal named "Killmanjaro" is awarded to a player who gets seven multiplayer kills in a row within four seconds of each kill. The mountain itself also features in ''[[Halo 3]]''.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.wired.com/2007/09/halo-levels/ |publisher=''[[Wired (magazine)|Wired]]'' |quote=While creating several environments based on the area of Africa surrounding Mount Kilimanjaro, Bungie designers used a satellite map of the region to make sure the geography would remain consistent from scene to scene — and that as the "day" inside the single-player story wore on, the sun would set at a realistic pace. (Even the road signs in the game are "mostly close to real life," a designer told me: When you see a ruined highway sign saying "New Mombasa: 47 miles," that's roughly the distance to Mombasa, Kenya.) |title=Halo 3 Turns French Cathedral Into Electronic Battleground |first=Clive |last=Thompson |date=September 26, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170602162418/https://www.wired.com/2007/09/halo-levels/ |archive-date=June 2, 2017}}</ref>
* The mountain was shown in BBC's ''[[Africa (TV series)|Africa]]''.
* The 2010 [[Tamil language|Tamil]] science fiction film [[Enthiran]] featured a song ''Kilimanjaro''

==Special events==
* According to the Tanzania National Parks Authority, the first wedding performed on the mountain below the summit took place on 21 September 2014, when an American couple exchanged vows at Shira 2 Camp.<ref>{{cite news | title=American couple to exchange vows on Mount Kilimanjaro | url=http://dailynews.co.tz/index.php/local-news/36233-american-couple-to-exchange-vows-on-mount-kilimanjaro | newspaper=Daily News | accessdate=29 September 2014 | deadurl=yes | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141006082550/http://dailynews.co.tz/index.php/local-news/36233-american-couple-to-exchange-vows-on-mount-kilimanjaro | archivedate=6 October 2014 | df= }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | date=22 September 2014 | title=Couple marries on top of Mount Kilimanjaro, Africa's highest peak | url=http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/couple-marries-on-top-of-mount-kilimanjaro-africas-highest-peak/1/384390.html | newspaper=India Today | accessdate= 7 October 2014}}</ref> In 2011, a couple had exchanged their vows at the summit.<ref>{{cite news | date=24 September 2014 | title=More couples exchange marriage vows on Africa’s roof | url=http://www.ippmedia.com/frontend/?l=72488 | newspaper=The Guardian | accessdate=1 October 2014}}</ref>
* On 26 September 2014, a new world record for the highest-ever cricket match was set when a group of international cricketers played on a flat crater on the mountain at an elevation of {{convert|5730|m}}.<ref>{{cite web | date=26 September 2014 | title=Cricketers play on Kilimanjaro to set new world record | url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-29375679 | newspaper=BBC News | accessdate=29 September 2014}}</ref>

==See also==
* [[Balletto Glacier]]
* [[Barranco Glacier]]
* [[Credner Glacier]]
* [[Furtwängler Glacier]]
* [[Great Penck Glacier]]
* [[List of volcanoes in Tanzania]]
* [[Little Penck Glacier]]
* [[Rebmann Glacier]]
* [[Southeast Africa]]

==References==
{{Reflist|30em|refs=
<ref name="Hutchinson">
{{cite web | url = http://www.ntz.info/gen/b00769.html
| title = The Meaning of Kilimanjaro | author = Hutchinson, J. A. | year = 1965
| work = Department of Language and Linguistics | publisher = University College | location = Dar Es Salaam}}</ref>
}}

==External links==
{{Sister project links | commons= Category:Kilimanjaro |wikt=no | q=no| b=no | n=no |s=no | v=no | species=no |d=Q7296 | display=Mt. Kilimanjaro |voy=Mount Kilimanjaro }}

<!-- STOP! Do NOT add your SPAM here! Wikipedia is an encyclopaedia and not a directory. We will immediately remove it!!-->
* {{Britannica|317710|Kilimanjaro}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120923032157/http://www.tanzaniaparks.com/kili.html Mount Kilimanjaro National Park]
* [http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=3054 NASA Earth Explorer page]
* [http://www.mountain-forecast.com/peaks/Mount-Kilimanjaro/forecasts/5963 Weather forecase for Mount Kilimanjaro (19,565 feet)]
* [http://www.kilimanjaro.cc/glacial-recession.htm Glacial Recession on Kilimanjaro (pictures of southern icefields)]
* [http://www.kilicam.com Mount Kilimanjaro live webcam]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20141107022451/http://www.ewpnet.com/kilimanjaro/flora/index.htm Kilimanjaro flora picture gallery]
* [http://collections.lib.uwm.edu/cdm/search/collection/agsafrica/searchterm/Kilimanjaro%20%28mountain%29/field/all/mode/exact/conn/and/cosuppress/ Aerial photographs of Mount Kilimanjaro, 1937–38]
* [http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/tanzania_kilimanjaro Kilimanjaro]
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/magazine/7919100.stm How hard is it to climb Mount Kilimanjaro?]
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{{Seven Summits}}
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[[Category:Mount Kilimanjaro| 01]]
[[Category:Mountains of Tanzania|Kilimanjaro]]
[[Category:Five-thousanders of Africa|Kilimanjaro]]
[[Category:Geography of Kilimanjaro Region]]
[[Category:Highest points of countries|Kilimanjaro]]
[[Category:Moshi, Tanzania]]
[[Category:Seven Summits]]
[[Category:Stratovolcanoes of Tanzania|Kilimanjaro]]
[[Category:Volcanic Seven Summits|Kilimanjaro]]
[[Category:Volcanoes of the Great Rift Valley]]

Revision as of 19:54, 13 November 2018

Kilimanjaro
The Kibo summit of Mount Kilimanjaro.
Highest point
Elevation5,895 m (19,341 ft)[1][2]
Prominence5,885 m (19,308 ft)[3]
Ranked 4th[4]
Isolation5,510 km (3,420 mi) Edit this on Wikidata
Listing
Coordinates03°04′33″S 37°21′12″E / 3.07583°S 37.35333°E / -3.07583; 37.35333
Geography
Kilimanjaro is located in Tanzania
Kilimanjaro
Kilimanjaro
Kilimanjaro's location in Tanzania
Kilimanjaro is located in Africa
Kilimanjaro
Kilimanjaro
Kilimanjaro (Africa)
LocationKilimanjaro Region, north east Tanzania
Parent rangeThe Eastern Rift mountains
Topo mapKilimanjaro map and guide by Wielochowski[5]
Geology
Age of rock3 million years
Mountain typeStratovolcano
Last eruptionBetween 150,000 and 200,000 years ago
Climbing
First ascent6 October 1889 by Hans Meyer and Ludwig Purtscheller
Easiest routeHiking
Mount Kilimanjaro from space, illustrating its diverse vegetation zones.[6]

Mount Kilimanjaro or just Kilimanjaro ( /ˌkɪlɪmənˈɑːr/),[7] with its three volcanic cones, "Kibo", "Mawenzi", and "Shira", is a dormant volcano in Tanzania. It is the highest mountain in Africa, about 4,900 metres (16,100 ft) from its base, and 5,895 metres (19,341 ft) above sea level. The first people known to have reached the summit of the mountain were Hans Meyer and Ludwig Purtscheller in 1889. The mountain is part of the Kilimanjaro National Park and is a major climbing destination. The mountain has been the subject of many scientific studies because of its shrinking glaciers and disappearing ice fields.

Geology and physical features

Kilimanjaro is a large stratovolcano and is composed of three distinct volcanic cones: Kibo, the highest; Mawenzi at 5,149 metres (16,893 ft);[8] and Shira, the shortest at 4,005 metres (13,140 ft).[9] Mawenzi and Shira are extinct, while Kibo is dormant and could erupt again.[10]

Uhuru Peak is the highest summit on Kibo's crater rim. The Tanzania National Parks Authority, a Tanzanian governmental agency,[1] and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization[2] list the height of Uhuru Peak as 5,895 m (19,341 ft). That height is based on a British Ordnance Survey in 1952.[11] Since then, the height has been measured as 5,892 metres (19,331 ft) in 1999, 5,891 metres (19,327 ft) in 2008, and 5,888 metres (19,318 ft) in 2014.[11]

Geology

The interior of the volcanic edifice is poorly known, given the lack of large scale erosion that could have exposed the interiors of the volcano.[12]

Eruptive activity at the Shira centre commenced about 2.5 million years ago, with the last important phase occurring about 1.9 million years ago, just before the northern part of the edifice collapsed.[10] Shira is topped by a broad plateau at 3,800 metres (12,500 ft), which may be a filled caldera. The remnant caldera rim has been degraded deeply by erosion. Before the caldera formed and erosion began, Shira might have been between 4,900 m (16,000 ft) and 5,200 m (17,000 ft) high. It is mostly composed of basic lavas with some pyroclastics. The formation of the caldera was accompanied by lava emanating from ring fractures, but there was no large scale explosive activity. Two cones formed subsequently, the phonolitic one at the northwest end of the ridge and the doleritic "Platzkegel" in the caldera centre.[10][12][13]

Both Mawenzi and Kibo began erupting about 1 million years ago.[10] They are separated by the "Saddle Plateau" at 4,400 metres (14,400 ft) elevation.[14]: 3 

Aerial view of Kilimanjaro in December 2009

The youngest dated rocks at Mawenzi are about 448,000 years old.[10] Mawenzi forms a horseshoe shaped ridge with pinnacles and ridges opening to the northeast that has a tower-like shape resulting from deep erosion and a mafic dyke swarm. Several large cirques cut into the ring, the largest of these sits on top of the Great Barranco gorge. Also notable are the Ost and West Barrancos on the northeastern side of the mountain. Most of the eastern side of the mountain has been removed by erosion. Mawenzi has a subsidiary peak named Neumann Tower (4,425 metres (14,518 ft)).[10][12][13]

Kibo is the largest cone and is more than 15 miles (24 km) wide at the "Saddle Plateau" altitude. The last activity here has been dated to between 150,000 and 200,000 years ago and created the current Kibo summit crater. Kibo still has gas-emitting fumaroles in the crater.[10][12][13] Kibo is capped by an almost symmetrical cone with escarpments rising 180 metres (590 ft) to 200 metres (660 ft) on the south side. These escarpments define a 2.5-kilometre-wide (1.6 mi) caldera[15] caused by the collapse of the summit. Within this caldera is the Inner Cone and within the crater of the Inner Cone is the Reusch Crater, which the Tanganyika government in 1954 named after Gustav Otto Richard Reusch upon his climbing the mountain for the 25th time (out of 65 attempts during his lifetime).[16][17] The Ash Pit, 350 metres (1,150 ft) deep, lies within the Reusch Crater.[18] About 100,000 years ago, part of Kibo's crater rim collapsed, creating the area known as the Western Breach and the Great Barranco.[19]

An almost continuous layer of lavas buries most older geological features, with the exception of exposed strata within the Great West Notch and the Kibo Barranco. The former exposes intrusions of syenite.[12] Kibo has five main lava formations:[10]

  • Phonotephrites and tephriphonolites of the "Lava Tower group", on a dyke cropping out at 4,600 metres (15,100 ft), 482,000 years ago
  • Tephriphonolite to phonolite lavas "characterized by rhomb mega-phenocrysts of sodic feldspars" of the "Rhomb Porphyry group", 460,000–360,000 years ago
  • aphyric phonolite lavas, "commonly underlain by basal obsidian horizons", of the "Lent group", 359,000–337,000 years ago
  • porphyritic tephriphonolite to phonolite lavas of the "Caldera rim group", 274,000–170,000 years ago
  • phonolite lava flows with aegirine phenocrysts, of the "Inner Crater group", which represents the last volcanic activity on Kibo

Kibo has more than 250 parasitic cones on its northwest and southeast flanks that were formed between 150,000 and 200,000 years ago[10] and erupted picrobasalts, trachybasalts, ankaramites, and basanites.[10][12][13] They reach as far as Lake Chala and Taveta in the southeast and the Lengurumani Plain in the northwest. Most of these cones are well preserved, with the exception of the Saddle Plateau cones that were heavily affected by glacial action. Despite their mostly small size, lava from the cones has obscured large portions of the mountain. The Saddle Plateau cones are mostly cinder cones with terminal effusion of lava, while the Upper Rombo Zone cones mostly generated lava flows. All Saddle Plateau cones predate the last glaciation.[12]

According to reports gathered in the 19th century from the Maasai, Lake Chala on Kibo's eastern flank was the site of a village that was destroyed by an eruption.[20]

Drainage

The mountain is drained by a network of rivers and streams, especially on the wetter and more heavily eroded southern side and especially above 1,200 metres (3,900 ft). Below that altitude, increased evaporation and human water usage reduces the waterflows. The Lumi and Pangani rivers drain Kilimanjaro on the eastern and southern sides, respectively.[21]

Two of Kilimanjaro's volcanic cones: Kibo (left) and Mawenzi (right).

Name

The Historical map with "Kilima-Ndscharo" during the German East Africa in the year 1888

The origin of the name "Kilimanjaro" is not precisely known, but a number of theories exist. European explorers had adopted the name by 1860 and reported that "Kilimanjaro" was the mountain's Kiswahili name.[22] The 1907 edition of The Nuttall Encyclopædia also records the name of the mountain as "Kilima-Njaro".[23]

Johann Ludwig Krapf wrote in 1860 that Swahilis along the coast called the mountain "Kilimanjaro". Although he did not support his claim,[24] he claimed that "Kilimanjaro" meant either "mountain of greatness" or "mountain of caravans". Under the latter meaning, "Kilima" meant "mountain" and "Jaro" possibly meant "caravans".[22]

Jim Thompson claimed in 1885, although he also did not support his claim,[24] that the term Kilima-Njaro "has generally been understood to mean" the Mountain (Kilima) of Greatness (Njaro). "Though not improbably it may mean" the "White" mountain.[25]

"Njaro" is an ancient Kiswahili word for "shining".[26] Similarly, Krapf wrote that a chief of the Wakamba people, whom he visited in 1849, "had been to Jagga and had seen the Kima jaJeu, mountain of whiteness, the name given by the Wakamba to Kilimanjaro...."[27] More correctly in the Kikamba language, this would be Kiima Kyeu, and this possible derivation has been popular with several investigators.[24]

Others have assumed that "Kilima" is Kiswahili for "mountain". The problem with this assumption is that "Kilima" actually means "hill" and is, therefore, the diminutive of "Mlima", the proper Kiswahili word for mountain. However, "[i]t is ... possible ... that an early European visitor, whose knowledge of [Kiswahili] was not extensive, changed mlima to kilima by analogy with the two Wachagga names; Kibo and Kimawenzi."[24]

A different approach is to assume that the "Kileman" part of Kilimanjaro comes from the Kichagga "kileme", which means "which defeats", or "kilelema", which means "which has become difficult or impossible". The "Jaro" part would "then be derived from njaare, a bird, or, according to other informants, a leopard, or, possibly from jyaro a caravan." Considering that the name Kilimanjaro has never been current among the Wachagga people, it is possible that the name was derived from Wachagga saying that the mountain was unclimbable, "kilemanjaare" or "kilemajyaro" and porters misinterpreted this as being the name of the mountain.[24]

In the 1880s, the mountain became a part of German East Africa and was called "Kilima-Ndscharo" in German following the Kiswahili name components.[28]

On 6 October 1889, Hans Meyer reached the highest summit on the crater ridge of Kibo. He named it "Kaiser-Wilhelm-Spitze" ("Kaiser Wilhelm peak").[29] That name apparently was used until Tanzania was formed in 1964,[30] when the summit was renamed "Uhuru Peak", meaning "Freedom Peak" in Kiswahili.[31]

Peeking

History

First sightings by non-indigenous explorers

Kilimanjaro in 1911
From the UK National Archives
First aerial photograph of Kibo taken by Walter Mittelholzer in 1929

The mountain may have been known to non-Africans since antiquity. Sailors' reports recorded by Ptolemy mention a "Moon Mountain" and a spring lake of the Nile, which may indicate Kilimanjaro; although available historical information does not allow differentiation among Mount Kenya, the mountains of Ethiopia, the Virunga Mountains, Kilimanjaro, and the Rwenzori Mountains. Before Ptolemy, Aeschylus and Herodotus referred to "Egypt nurtured by the snows" and a spring between two mountains, respectively. One of these mentions two tall mountains in the coastal regions with a valley with traces of fire in between. Martín Fernández de Enciso, a Spanish traveller to Mombasa who obtained information about the interior from native caravans, said in his Summa de Geografía (1519) that west of Mombasa "stands the Ethiopian Mount Olympus, which is exceedingly high, and beyond it are the Mountains of the Moon, in which are the sources of the Nile".[20][32]: 1–5 [33]: 114 

The German missionaries Johannes Rebmann of Mombasa and Krapf were the first Europeans to try to reach the snowy mountain. According to English geographer Halford Mackinder and English explorer Harry Johnston, Rebmann in 1848 was the first European to report the existence of Kilimanjaro.[34][35] Hans Meyer has claimed that Rebmann first arrived in Africa in 1846 and has quoted Rebmann's diary entry of 11 May 1848 as saying, "This morning, at 10 o'clock, we obtained a clearer view of the mountains of Jagga, the summit of one of which was covered by what looked like a beautiful white cloud. When I inquired as to the dazzling whiteness, the guide merely called it 'cold' and at once I knew it could be neither more nor less than snow.... Immediately I understood how to interpret the marvelous tales Dr. Krapf and I had heard at the coast, of a vast mountain of gold and silver in the far interior, the approach to which was guarded by evil spirits."[32]: 6  In light of these sources, J. Shearson Hyland's assertion that Rebmann first saw the mountain in 1840[20] appears to be erroneous.

Climbing history

Nineteenth-century explorers

In August 1861, the Prussian officer Baron Karl Klaus von der Decken accompanied by English geologist R. Thornton made a first attempt to climb Kibo but "got no farther than 8,200 feet (2,500 m) owing to the inclemency of the weather."[32]: 9 [36] In December 1862, von der Decken tried a second time together with Otto Kersten. They reached a height of 14,000 feet (4,300 m).[37]

In August 1871, missionary Charles New became the "first European to reach the equatorial snows" on Kilimanjaro at an elevation of slightly more than 13,000 feet (4,000 m).[32]: 11 

In June 1887, the Hungarian Count Sámuel Teleki and Austrian Lieutenant Ludwig von Höhnel made an attempt to climb the mountain. Approaching from the saddle between Mawenzi and Kibo, Höhnel stopped at 4,950 meters (16,240 ft), but Teleki pushed through until he reached the snow at 5,300 meters (17,400 ft).[38]

Later in 1887 during his first attempt to climb Kilimanjaro, the German geology professor Hans Meyer reached the lower edge of the ice cap on Kibo, where he was forced to turn back because he lacked the equipment needed to handle the ice.[39]: 81  The following year, Meyer planned another attempt with Oscar Baumann, a cartographer, but the mission was aborted after the pair were held hostage and ransomed during the Abushiri Revolt.[39]: 82 

In the autumn of 1888, the American naturalist Dr. Abbott and the German explorer Otto Ehrenfried Ehlers approached the summit from the northwest. While Abbott turned back earlier, Ehlers at first claimed to have reached the summit rim but, after severe criticism of that claim, later withdrew it.[32]: 17–19 

In 1889, Meyer returned to Kilimanjaro with the Austrian mountaineer Ludwig Purtscheller for a third attempt.[39]: 82  The success of this attempt was based on the establishment of several campsites with food supplies so that multiple attempts at the top could be made without having to descend too far.[39]: 82  Meyer and Purtscheller pushed to near the crater rim on October 3 but turned around exhausted from hacking footsteps in the icy slope.[39]: 82  Three days later, on Purtscheller's fortieth birthday, they reached the highest summit on the southern rim of the crater.[39]: 82  They were the first to confirm that Kibo has a crater.[39]: 82  After descending to the saddle between Kibo and Mawenzi, Meyer and Purtscheller attempted to climb the more technically challenging Mawenzi but could reach only the top of Klute Peak, a subsidiary peak, before retreating due to illness.[39]: 84  On October 18, they reascended Kibo to enter and study the crater, cresting the rim at Hans Meyers Notch.[39]: 84  In total, Meyer and Purtscheller spent 16 days above 15,000 feet (4,600 m) during their expedition.[39]: 84  They were accompanied in their high camps by Mwini Amani of Pangani, who cooked and supplied the sites with water and firewood.[32]: 135–186 

The first ascent of the highest summit of Mawenzi was made on 29 July 1912, by the German climbers Eduard Hans Oehler and Fritz Klute, who named it Hans Meyer Peak. Oehler and Klute went on to make the third-ever ascent of Kibo, via the Drygalski Glacier, and descended via the Western Breach.[39]: 85 

In 1989, the organizing committee of the 100-year celebration of the first ascent decided to award posthumous certificates to the African porter-guides who had accompanied Meyer and Purtscheller.[40] One person in pictures or documents of the 1889 expedition was thought to match a living inhabitant of Marangu, Yohani Kinyala Lauwo.[40] Lauwo did not know his own age.[40] Nor did he remember Meyer or Purtscheller, but he remembered joining a Kilimanjaro expedition involving a Dutch doctor who lived near the mountain and that he did not get to wear shoes during the climb.[40] Lauwo claimed that he had climbed the mountain three times before the beginning of World War I.[40] The committee concluded that he had been a member of Meyer's team and therefore must have been born around 1871.[40] Lauwo died on 10 May 1996, 107 years after the first ascent, but now is sometimes even suggested as co-first-ascendant of Kilimanjaro.[41] However, this would imply he lived to the age of 125 years, so the claim appears unlikely

Fastest ascent and descent

The fastest ascent-descent has been recorded by the Swiss-Ecuadorian mountain guide Karl Egloff (born 16 March 1981 in Quito), who ran to the top and back in 6 hours and 42 minutes on 13 August 2014.[42] Previous records were held by Spanish mountain runner Kílian Jornet (7 hours, 14 minutes on 29 September 2010) and by Tanzanian guide Simon Mtuy (9 hours, 21 minutes on 22 February 2006).[43][44]

Fastest female ascent and descent

The female ascent record is held by Anne-Marie Flammersfeld. On 27 July 2015, she climbed to the summit in 8 hours, 32 minutes via the Umbwe Route, which is about 30 kilometres (19 mi) long. Born in Germany but living in Switzerland, she broke the record of Britain's Becky Shuttleworth who climbed to the summit in 11 hours, 34 minutes on 20 September 2014.[43][45]

Flammersfeld then needed 4 hours, 26 minutes to run down to the Mweka Gate, for a combined ascent and descent time of 12 hours, 58 minutes.[45] That broke the previous record of 18 hours, 31 minutes held by Debbie Bachman.[46]

Youngest and oldest people to summit

Despite an age-limit of 10 years for a climbing permit, exceptions are occasionally granted. Montannah Kenney, a 7-year-old girl from Texas broke the world record as the youngest female to climb the tallest mountain in Africa in March 2018. Her motivation was the death of her late father.[47]

Also, Keats Boyd of Los Angeles was only seven years old when he summited Kilimanjaro on 21 January 2008. The oldest person to reach Uhuru Peak was Angela Vorobeva at age 86 years and 267 days. The oldest man to summit the mountain is American Robert Wheeler, who was 85 years and 201 days when he summited on 2 October 2014.

Ascents by disabled people

Wheelchair user Bernard Goosen scaled Kilimanjaro in six days in 2007, while in 2012 Kyle Maynard, who has no forearms or lower legs, crawled unassisted to the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro.[43]

Longest Stay at the top of Mt.Kilimanjaro

Madhusudan Patidar on 18 December 2017 became the first person in the world who stayed 22 hours at the top of Mt. Kilimanjaro through the western breach route in record 35 hours of climbing.[48]

Trekking

A 3D model of Kibo

Overview

Kilimanjaro National Park generated US $51 million in revenue in 2013,[49]: 285  the second-most of any Tanzanian national park.[50]: 258  (The Ngorongoro Conservation Area, which includes the heavily visited Ngorongoro Crater, is not a national park.) The Tanzania National Parks Authority reported that the park recorded 57,456 tourists during the 2011–12 budget year, of whom 16,425 hiked the mountain, which was well below the capacity of 28,470 as specified in the park's General Management Plan.[51] The mountain climbers generated irregular and seasonal jobs for about 11,000 guides, porters, and cooks in 2007,[52] although serious concerns have been raised about their poor working conditions and inadequate wages.[49]: 287–291 [50]: 259 [52]

There are seven official trekking routes by which to ascend and descend Kilimanjaro: Lemosho, Machame, Marangu, Mweka, Rongai, Shira, and Umbwe.[53] Of all the routes, Machame is widely proclaimed as the most scenic, albeit steeper, route. This was true until the opening of Lemosho and Northern Circuit routes, which are equally scenic if not more. The Machame route can be done in six or seven days,[54] Lemosho can be done in six to eight days, and the Northern Circuit routes can be done in seven or more days. The Rongai is the easiest and least scenic of all camping routes.[55] The Marangu is also relatively easy, but this route tends to be very busy, the ascent and descent routes are the same, and accommodation is in shared huts with all other climbers.[56]

People who wish to trek to the summit of Kilimanjaro are advised to undertake appropriate research[57] and ensure that they are both properly equipped and physically capable. Though the climb is technically not as challenging as when climbing the high peaks of the Himalayas or Andes, the high elevation, low temperature, and occasional high winds make this a difficult and dangerous trek. Acclimatization is essential, and even the most experienced trekkers suffer some degree of altitude sickness.[58]

Kilimanjaro as seen from the Moshi municipality in the Kilimanjaro Region

Dangers

A small study of people attempting to reach the summit of Kilimanjaro in July and August 2005 found that 61.3 percent succeeded and 77 percent experienced acute mountain sickness (AMS).[59] A retrospective study of 917 persons who attempted to reach the summit via the Lemosho or Machame routes found that 70.4 percent experienced AMS, defined in this study to be headache, nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, or loss of appetite.[60]

Kilimanjaro's summit is well above the altitude at which life-threatening high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE) or high altitude cerebral edema (HACE), the most severe forms of AMS, can occur.[61] These health risks are increased substantially by excessively fast climbing schedules motivated by high daily national park fees, busy holiday travel schedules, and the lack of permanent shelter on most routes.[62]

A daily dose of 250 milligrams of acetazolamide is associated with a 48 percent relative-risk reduction of AMS compared to placebo, with a higher dose not providing additional protection but causing more adverse side effects.[63] The six-day Machame route, which involves one night of "sleeping low", may delay the onset of AMS but does not ultimately prevent its occurrence.[64]

Falls on steep portions of the mountain and rock slides have killed trekkers. For this reason, the route via the Arrow Glacier was closed for several years, reopening in December 2007.[65]

Due to the improper disposal of human waste in the mountain environment there is high risk of health hazards.[66] Human faeces are very dangerous; they contain over 100 bacteria, protozoans and viruses that, without a specialised recycling process, pose a threat to both animals and human beings.[67] Only boiled or chemically treated water is accepted for drinking. Decent changes have appeared in recent years–management bodies care more about human waste disposal. The authorities in mountain regions are gradually exchanging the old, leaking toilets for newer, eco–friendly models.[68]

Deaths

According to the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Centre in Moshi, 25 people died from January 1996 to October 2003 while climbing the mountain. Seventeen were female and eight were male, ranging in age from 29 to 74. Fourteen died from advanced high altitude illness, including one with HACE, five with HAPE, and six with both HACE and HAPE. The remaining eleven deaths resulted from trauma (three), myocardial infarction (four), pneumonia (two), cardio-pulmonary failure of other underlying cause (one), and acute appendicitis (one). The overall mortality rate was an estimated 13.6 per 100,000 climbers (0.0136 percent).[69]

Mapping

A map of the Kibo cone on Mount Kilimanjaro was published by the British government's Directorate of Overseas Surveys in 1964 based on aerial photography conducted in 1962 (Subset of Kilimanjaro, East Africa (Tanganyika) Series Y742, Sheet 56/2, D.O.S. 422 1964, Edition 1, Scale 1:50,000).[70]

Tourist mapping was first published by the Ordnance Survey in England in 1989 based on the original DOS mapping (1:100,000, 100 ft intervals, DOS 522).[71] West Col Productions produced a map with tourist information in 1990 (1:75,000, 100 metre contour intervals, inset maps of Kibo and Mawenzi on 1:20,000 and 1:30,000 scales respectively and 50 metre contour interval).[71] In the last few years, numerous other maps have become available of various qualities.[5]

Vegetation

The Cloud forest on the Marangu route on the south eastern slope.

Natural forests cover about 1,000 square kilometres (250,000 acres) on Kilimanjaro.[72] In the foothill area maize, beans, and sunflowers (on the western side also wheat) are cultivated. Remnants of the former savanna vegetation with Acacia, Combretum, Terminalia and Grewia also occur. Between 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) and 1,800 metres (5,900 ft), coffee also appears as part of the "Chagga home gardens" agroforestry. Native vegetation at this altitude range (Strombosia, Newtonia, and Entandrophragma) is limited to inaccessible valleys and gorges[73] and is completely different from vegetation at higher altitudes. On the southern slope montane forests first contain Ocotea usambarensis as well as ferns and epiphytes, farther up in cloud forests Podocarpus latifolius, Hagenia abyssinica and Erica excelsa grow as well as fog-dependent mosses. On the drier northern slopes olive, Croton-Calodendrum, Cassipourea, and Juniperus form forests in order of increasing altitude. Between 3,100 metres (10,200 ft) and 3,900 metres (12,800 ft) lie Erica bush and heathlands, followed by Helichrysum until 4,500 metres (14,800 ft).[74][75] Neophytes have been observed, including Poa annua.[74]

Records from the Maundi crater at 2,780 metres (9,120 ft) indicate that the vegetation of Kilimanjaro has varied over time. Forest vegetation retreated during the Last Glacial Maximum and the ericaceous vegetation belt lowered by 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) between 42,000 and 30,000 years ago because of the drier and colder conditions.[73]

The Tussock Grassland is an area on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro that contains many unique species of vegetation like the water holding cabbage.

Animal life

Elephants at the Amboseli National Park against Mount Kilimanjaro

Large animals are rare on Kilimanjaro and are more frequent in the forests and lower parts of the mountain. Elephants and Cape buffaloes are among the animals that can be potentially hazardous to trekkers. Bushbucks, chameleons, dik-diks, duikers, mongooses, sunbirds, and warthogs have been reported as well. Zebras and hyenas have sporadically been observed on the Shira plateau.[76]

Specific species associated with the mountain include the Kilimanjaro shrew[77] and the chameleon Kinyongia tavetana.[78]

Climate

The climate of Kilimanjaro is influenced by the height of the mountain, which allows the simultaneous influence of the equatorial trade winds and the high altitude anti-trades, and the isolated position of the mountain. Kilimanjaro has daily upslope and nightly downslope winds, a regimen stronger on the southern than the northern side of the mountain. The flatter southern flanks are more extended and affect the atmosphere more strongly.[14]: 3–4 

Kilimanjaro has two distinct rainy seasons, one from March to May and another around November. The northern slopes receive much less rainfall than the southern ones.[72] The lower southern slope receives 800 to 900 millimetres (31 to 35 in) annually, rising to 1,500 to 2,000 millimetres (59 to 79 in) at 1,500 metres (4,900 ft) altitude and peaking "partly over" 3,000 millimetres (120 in) in the forest belt at 2,000 to 2,300 metres (6,600 to 7,500 ft). In the alpine zone, annual precipitation decreases to 200 millimetres (7.9 in).[74]: 18 

The average temperature in the summit area is approximately −7 °C (19 °F). Nighttime surface temperatures on the Northern Ice Field (NIF) fall on average to −9 °C (16 °F) with an average daytime high temperature of −4 °C (25 °F). During nights of extreme radiational cooling, the NIF can cool to as low as −15 to −27 °C (5 to −17 °F).[79]: 674 

Snowfall can occur any time of year but is associated mostly with northern Tanzania's two rainy seasons (November–December and March–May).[79]: 673  Precipitation in the summit area occurs principally as snow and graupel (250 to 500 millimetres (9.8 to 19.7 in) per year) and ablates within days or years.[80]

Climate zones

  • Bushland, 800 m – 1,800 m (2,600 ft – 5,900 ft);
  • Rainweald, 1,800 m – 2,800 m (5,900 ft – 9,200 ft);
  • Heath and Moorland, 2,800 m – 4,000 m (9,200 ft – 13,100 ft);
  • Highland Barrens, 4,000 m – 5,000 m (13,100 ft– 16,400 ft);
  • Ice Cap, 5,000 m – 5,895 m (16,400 ft – 19,341 ft).

Glaciers

Aerial view of the Kibo summit of Kilimanjaro in 1938.

Kibo's diminishing ice cap exists because Kilimanjaro is a little-dissected, massive mountain that rises above the snow line. The cap is divergent and outwards splits up into individual glaciers. The central portion of the ice cap is interrupted by the presence of the Kibo crater.[14]: 5  The summit glaciers and ice fields do not display significant horizontal movements because their low thickness precludes major deformation.[80]

Geological evidence shows five successive glacial episodes during the Quaternary period, namely First (500,000 BP), Second (greater than 360,000 years ago to 240,000 BP), Third (150,000 to 120,000 BP), Fourth (also known as "Main") (20,000 to 17,000 BP), and Little (16,000 to 14,000 BP). The Third may have been the most extensive, and the Little appears to be statistically indistinguishable from the Fourth.[81]

A continuous ice cap covering approximately 400 square kilometres (150 sq mi) down to an elevation of 3,200 metres (10,500 ft) covered Kilimanjaro during the Last Glacial Maximum in the Pleistocene epoch (the Main glacial episode), extending across the summits of Kibo and Mawenzi.[9][15] Because of the exceptionally prolonged dry conditions during the subsequent Younger Dryas stadial, the ice fields on Kilimanjaro may have become extinct 11,500 years BP.[80] Ice cores taken from Kilimanjaro's Northern Ice Field (NIF) indicates that the glaciers there have a "basal age" of about 11,700 years,[82] although an analysis of ice taken in 2011 from exposed vertical cliffs in the NIF supports an age extending only to 800 years BP.[83]

Higher precipitation rates at the beginning of the Holocene epoch (11,500 years BP) allowed the ice cap to reform.[80] The glaciers survived a widespread drought during a three century period beginning around 4,000 years BP.[80][84]

Vertical margin wall of the Rebmann Glacier in 2005 with Mount Meru in the background.

In the late 1880s, the summit of Kibo was completely covered by an ice cap covering about 20 square kilometres (7.7 sq mi) with outlet glaciers cascading down the western and southern slopes, and except for the inner cone, the entire caldera was buried. Glacier ice also flowed through the Western Breach.[9][15]

The slope glaciers retreated rapidly between 1912 and 1953, in response to a sudden shift in climate at the end of the 19th century that made them "drastically out of equilibrium", and more slowly thereafter. Their continuing demise indicates they are still out of equilibrium in response to a constant change in climate over the last 100 years.[9]

In contrast to the persistent slope glaciers, the glaciers on Kilimanjaro's crater plateau have appeared and disappeared repeatedly during the Holocene epoch, with each cycle lasting a few hundred years.[85]: 1088  It appears that decreasing specific humidity instead of temperature changes has caused the shrinkage of the slope glaciers since the late 19th century. No clear warming trend at the elevation of those glaciers occurred between 1948 and 2005. Although air temperatures at that elevation are always below freezing, solar radiation causes melting on their vertical faces. "There is no pathway for the plateau glaciers other than to continuously retreat once their vertical margins are exposed to solar radiation."[9] Vertical ice margin walls are a unique characteristic of the summit glaciers and a major place of the shrinkage of the glaciers. They manifest stratifications, calving, and other ice features.[79]

A vertical glacier margin wall as seen from Gilman's Point on the crater rim at a sunrise in 1998

Almost 85 percent of the ice cover on Kilimanjaro disappeared from October 1912 to June 2011, with coverage decreasing from 11.40 square kilometres (4.40 sq mi) to 1.76 square kilometres (0.68 sq mi).[86]: 423  From 1912 to 1953, there was about a 1.1 percent average annual loss.[84] The average annual loss for 1953 to 1989 was 1.4 percent while the loss rate for 1989 to 2007 was 2.5 percent.[84] Of the ice cover still present in 2000, almost 40 percent had disappeared by 2011.[86]: 425  The glaciers are thinning in addition to losing areal coverage,[84] and do not have active accumulation zones with retreat occurring on all glacier surfaces. Loss of glacier mass is caused by both melting and sublimation.[80] While the current shrinking and thinning of Kilimanjaro's ice fields appears to be unique within its almost twelve millennium history, it is contemporaneous with widespread glacier retreat in mid-to-low latitudes across the globe.[84] At the current rate, most of the ice on Kilimanjaro will disappear by 2040 and "it is highly unlikely that any ice body will remain after 2060".[86]: 430 

A complete disappearance of the ice would be of only "negligible importance" to the water budget of the area around the mountain. The forests of Kilimanjaro, far below the ice fields, "are [the] essential water reservoirs for the local and regional populations".[87]

The Kilimanjaro glaciers have been used for deriving ice core records, including two from the southern icefield. Based on this data, this icefield formed between 1,250 and 1,450 years BP.[88]

Mythology

Local legends by the Chagga people tell how a man named Tone once provoked a god, Ruwa, to bring famine upon the land. The people became angry at Tone, forcing him to flee. Nobody wanted to protect him but a solitary dweller who had stones that turned miraculously into cattle. The dweller bid that Tone never open the stable of the cattle. When Tone did not heed the warning and the cattle escaped, Tone followed them, but the fleeing cattle threw up hills to run on, including Mawenzi and Kibo. Tone finally collapsed on Kibo, ending the pursuit.

Another legend has it that Kibo and Mawenzi were good neighbours, until Mawenzi played a prank on Kibo and threw away embers he had received from Kibo and claimed that they had burned out. Kibo eventually got angry and beat Mawenzi badly, explaining why the mountain is so badly degraded. This theory explains Mawenzi's name as "the Battered".

Other legends tell of ivory-filled graves of elephants on the mountain, and of a cow named Rayli that produces miraculous fat from her tail glands. If a man tries to steal such a gland but is too slow in his moves, Rayli will blast a powerful snort and blow the thief hurling down into the plain.[89]

Special events

  • According to the Tanzania National Parks Authority, the first wedding performed on the mountain below the summit took place on 21 September 2014, when an American couple exchanged vows at Shira 2 Camp.[96][97] In 2011, a couple had exchanged their vows at the summit.[98]
  • On 26 September 2014, a new world record for the highest-ever cricket match was set when a group of international cricketers played on a flat crater on the mountain at an elevation of 5,730 metres (18,800 ft).[99]

See also

References

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