Free Korea Peak
Free Korea Peak | |
---|---|
Pik Svobodnaya Koreya | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 4,740[1] m (15,550 ft) |
Coordinates | 42°29′46″N 74°32′59″E / 42.49611°N 74.54972°E |
Geography | |
Parent range | Kyrgyz Ala-Too Range, Tian Shan |
Free Korea Peak (Russian: Пик Свободная Корея, romanized: Pik Svobodnaya Koreya), is a mountain in the Kyrgyz Ala-Too Range of the Tian Shan. It is located in Ala Archa National Park in Kyrgyzstan.[2] It was one of the most famous peaks of the former Soviet Union with a 900m wall on its northern face that is famously challenging to climb.[3][4]
Sources differ on Free Korea Peak's elevation, with both 4740m and 4777m quoted. To its north and slightly to the west lies the Ak-Sai Glacier.
History
The first ascent along the northern wall was made by an expedition led by V. Andreev in 1959.[3]
Prior to the discovery in the late 1980s of the 4810m Peak 4810 in Karavshin, Free Korea Peak, together with Ushba and Chatyn-Tau in the Caucasus, were considered some of the most difficult and prestigious peaks to climb in the former Soviet Union.[3]