- Batura Sar
Infobox Mountain
Name = Batura Sar
Photo = | Caption =
Elevation = 7,795 metres (25,574 feet)
Ranked 25th (12th in Pakistan)
Range =Karakoram
Location = Northern Areas of Pakistan
Prominence = 3,118 metres
Coordinates = coord|36|30|36|N|74|31|37|E|type:mountain
Topographic
Type=| Age=
First ascent =June 30 1976 by H Bleicher, H Oberhofer
Easiest route=rock/snow/ice climb
Listing = UltraBatura Sar, also referred to as Batura I, is the 25th highest mountain on earthref|cutoff and the 12th highest in
Pakistan . It is the highest peak of theBatura Muztagh , which is the westernmost subrange of theKarakoram range. It forms the apex of the Batura Wall, which is a continuously high part of the backbone of the Batura Muztagh.Alternate forms of the name of this peak are Batura, Batura I, and Batura I East. The height is also sometimes listed as 7785m, and the Western top of Batura I is of very similar height (often given as 7794m). __NOTOC__
Location
Batura Sar and the Batura Wall lie near the middle of the Batura Muztagh, which is theonly part of the Karakoram which is west of the
Hunza River . The river curves around the southwest, west, and northwest sides of the Batura Muztagh.In turn, theHunza Valley lies in theGilgit District of the Northern Areas ofPakistan .Notable Features
In addition to being one of the highest mountains in the world, Batura Sar is also the second most prominent peak in the Karakoram range. Since it lies at the northwest end of the Karakoram, there is no higher peak north or west of it in the world.
The Batura Wall is notable for being a long (approximately 10km) and imposing ridge over 7000m. Batura is a very ridgelike peak, not a pointed spire.
Although it is just slightly higher (according to the usual figures) than nearby
Rakaposhi , it is not nearly as famous, since it is set back much further from the Hunza Valley.History
Climbing began in the Batura Muztagh later than in other parts of the
Karakoram , anddespite Batura Sar's height, it has seen little climbing activity.A climber named Matthias Rebitsch is recorded (by Neate) as having been in the icefall area(this is presumably the Batura First Ice Flow on the north side of the peak) in 1954. The peak was attempted in 1959 by three British and two German climbers, but they all died, probably in an avalanche. Some of the climbers may have gotten near the summit.
The first ascent of the peak was in 1976 by the Göppingen Karakoram-Himalaya Expedition, led by Dr. Alexander Schlee. They placed their base camp on the Baltar Glacier, below the South Face of the peak, on May 21. Hubert Bleicher and Herbert Oberhofer reached the summit on June 30.
The first ascent route climbed first from the Eastern Baltar Glacier up and over Batokshi Peak (called "Saddle Peak" by the first expedition) to Batokshi Pass (called the"Batura Saddle"). It then climbed diagonally up and northeast to East Ridge, and thence to the summit. The route used five camps above base camp.
The second ascent of the peak was in 1983 by an Austrian group, who climbed a new route, tothe left of the first ascent route.
The Himalayan Index [ [http://www.alpine-club.org.uk/hi/ Himalayan Index] ] lists an ascent in 1984, but thisis contradicted by Neate's book, so the status of this is unclear.
The year 1988 saw the third or fourth ascent of Batura Sar, by another Polish-German expedition, led by Piotr Mlotecki. They used the first ascent route; however they failed in an additional goal of reaching Batura I West.
The Himalayan Index [ [http://www.alpine-club.org.uk/hi/ Himalayan Index] ] lists five other failed attempts on the peak; these include a winter attempt by an Austrian group in 1981. However there seems to have been little or no activity on the north side of the mountain since the 1950's.
Climbing
The first ascent route is outlined above. The first ascent party reported ice up to 50 degrees,but they do not record the use of any extensive
fixed rope s. They noted the weather and repeated storms as the primary difficulty.Notes
# This uses a cutoff of 500m prominence, or re-ascent.
Books/pamphlets/maps about Batura Sar
*"High Asia: An Illustrated History of the 7000 Metre Peaks" by Jill Neate, ISBN 0-89886-238-8
*"Batura Mustagh" (sketch map and pamphlet) by Jerzy Wala, 1988.
*"Orographical Sketch Map of the Karakoram" by Jerzy Wala, 1990. Published by the Swiss Foundation for Alpine Research.References
Other references
* [http://www.americanalpineclub.org/knowledge/aaj.asp American Alpine Journal] 1977, p. 273-274
* [http://www.americanalpineclub.org/knowledge/aaj.asp American Alpine Journal] 1989, p. 262External links
* [http://www.alpine-club.org.uk/hi/ Himalayan Index]
* [http://blankonthemap.free.fr/1_accueil/index.php?code=20050505 A clickable map of the Batura Muztagh]
* [http://www.viewfinderpanoramas.org/dem3.html#himalayas DEM files for the Himalaya] (Corrected versions of SRTM data; look for the "Batura Sar" tile)
* [http://bbs.keyhole.com/ubb/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/420123/an/0/page/0#420123 Northern Pakistan - highly detailed placemarks of towns, villages, peaks, glaciers, rivers and minor tributaries in Google Earth]
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