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Eight-thousander

The International Mountaineering and Climbing Federation (UIAA) recognises eight-thousanders as the 14 mountains that are more than 8,000 metres (26,247 ft) in height above sea level, and are considered to be sufficiently independent of neighbouring peaks. There is no precise definition of the criteria used to assess independence, and, since 2012, the UIAA has been involved in a process to consider whether the list should be expanded to 20 mountains. All eight-thousanders are located in the Himalayan and Karakoram mountain ranges in Asia, and their summits are in the death zone.

Locations of the world's 14 eight-thousanders, which are split between the Himalayan (right), and the Karakoram mountain ranges (left)

From 1950 to 1964, all 14 eight-thousanders were summited in the summer (the first was Annapurna I in 1950, and the last was Shishapangma in 1964), and from 1980 to 2021, all 14 were summited in the winter (the first being Mount Everest in 1980, and the last being K2 in 2021). On a variety of statistical techniques, the deadliest eight-thousander is Annapurna I (one death – climber or climber support – for every three summiters), followed by K2 and Nanga Parbat (one death for every four to five summiters), and then Dhaulagiri and Kangchenjunga (one for every six to seven summiters).

The first person to summit all 14 eight-thousanders was Italian Reinhold Messner in 1986, who did not use supplementary oxygen. In 2010, Spaniard Edurne Pasaban became the first woman to summit all 14, but with the aid of supplementary oxygen. In 2011, Austrian Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner became the first woman to summit all 14 without the aid of supplementary oxygen. In 2013, South Korean Kim Chang-ho climbed all 14 in 7 years and 310 days, without the aid of supplementary oxygen. In 2019, British-Nepalese climber Nirmal Purja, climbed all 14 in 6 months and 6 days, with supplementary oxygen. In July 2022, Sanu Sherpa became the first person to summit all 14 eight-thousanders twice, which he did over the period 2006 to 2022.

Issues with false summits (e.g. Cho Oyu, Annapurna I and Dhaulagiri), or separated dual summits (e.g. Shishapangma and Manaslu), have led to disputed claims of ascents.[1] In 2022, after several years of research, a team of experts reported that only three climbers, Ed Viesturs, Veikka Gustafsson and Nirmal Purja, had actually stood on the true summit of all 14 eight-thousanders.[2]

Climbing history

First ascents

 
Flight over Khumbu-region; six eight-thousanders are visible

The first recorded attempt on an eight-thousander was when Albert F. Mummery, Geoffrey Hastings and J. Norman Collie tried to climb Pakistan's Nanga Parbat in 1895. The attempt failed when Mummery and two Gurkhas, Ragobir Thapa and Goman Singh, were killed by an avalanche.[3]

The first recorded successful ascent of an eight-thousander was by the French Maurice Herzog and Louis Lachenal, who reached the summit of Annapurna on 3 June 1950 during the 1950 French Annapurna expedition.[4] Due to its location in Tibet, Shishapangma was the last eight-thousander to be ascended, which was completed by a Chinese team led by Xu Jing in 1964 (western China's mountains were closed to foreign travel until 1978).[5]

The first winter ascent of an eight-thousander was by a Polish team led by Andrzej Zawada on Mount Everest, with Leszek Cichy and Krzysztof Wielicki reaching the summit on 17 February 1980;[6] all-Polish teams would complete nine of the first fourteen winter ascents of eight-thousanders.[7] The final eight-thousander to be climbed in winter was K2, whose summit was ascended by a 10-person Nepalese team on 16 January 2021.[8]

Only two climbers have completed more than one first ascent of an eight-thousander, Hermann Buhl (Nanga Parbat and Broad Peak) and Kurt Diemberger (Broad Peak and Dhaulagiri). Buhl's summit of Nanga Parbat in 1953 is notable as being the only solo first ascent of one of the eight-thousanders. The Polish climber Jerzy Kukuczka is noted for creating over ten new routes on various eight-thousander mountains.[7] Italian climber Simone Moro made the first winter ascent of four eight-thousander mountains (Shishapangma, Makalu, Gasherbrum II, and Nanga Parbat),[9] while two Polish climbers have each made three first winter ascents of an eight-thousander, Krzysztof Wielicki (Everest, Kangchenjunga, and Lhotse) and Jerzy Kukuczka (Dhaulagiri I, Kangchenjunga, and Annapurna I).[7]

All 14

 
Comparison of the heights of the Eight-thousanders (red triangles) with the Seven Summits and Seven Second Summits
 
The 30–highest peaks in the world with over 500 m (1,640 ft) in prominence.[10]

On 16 October 1986, Italian Reinhold Messner became the first person to climb all 14 eight-thousanders. In 1987, Polish climber Jerzy Kukuczka became the second person to accomplish this feat.[7] Messner summited each of the 14 peaks without the aid of bottled oxygen, a feat that was only repeated by the Swiss Erhard Loretan nine years later in 1995 (Kukuczka had used supplementary oxygen while summiting Everest and on no other eight-thousander[7]).[11]

On 17 May 2010, Spanish climber Edurne Pasaban became the first woman to summit all 14 eight-thousanders.[12] In August 2011, Austrian climber Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner became the first woman to climb the 14 eight-thousanders without the use of supplementary oxygen.[13][14]

The first couple and team to summit all 14 eight-thousanders were the Italians Nives Meroi (who was the second woman to accomplish this feat without supplementary oxygen), and her husband Romano Benet [it] on 11 May 2017.[15][16] The couple climbed alpine style, without the use of supplementary oxygen or other support.[16][17]

Nepali mountain guide Kami Rita, holds the record for the most ascents of an eight-thousander peak at 39, a feat he achieved on 7 May 2022 by summiting Everest for the 26th time (which was also a record for the most summits of Everest by a climber).[18]

On 20 May 2013, South Korean climber Kim Chang-ho set a new speed record of climbing all 14 eight-thousanders, without the use of supplementary oxygen, in 7 years and 310 days. On 29 October 2019, the British-Nepali climber Nirmal Purja set a speed record for climbing all 14 eight-thousanders, with the use of supplementary oxygen, in 6 months and 6 days.[19][20][21]

In July 2022, Sanu Sherpa became the first person to summit all 14 eight-thousanders twice.[22] He started with Cho Oyu in 2006, and completed the double by summiting Gasherbrum II in July 2022.[23]

Deadliest

The extreme altitude and the fact that the summits of all eight-thousanders lie in the Death Zone mean that climber mortality (or death rate), is particularly high.[24] Two metrics are quoted to establish a death rate (i.e. broad and narrow) that are used to rank the eight-thousanders in order of deadliest (note that they are also the world's overall deadliest mountains).[25][26]

  • Broad death rate: The first metric is the ratio of successful climbers summiting to total deaths[a] on the mountain over a given period.[25] The Guinness Book of World Records uses this metric to name Annapurna I as the deadliest eight-thousander, and the world's deadliest mountain with roughly one person dying for every three people who successfully summit, i.e. a ratio of circa 30%.[27] Using consistent data from 1950 to 2012, mountaineering statistician Eberhard Jurgalski (see table below) used this metric to show Annapurna is the deadliest mountain (31.9%), followed by K2 (26.5%), Nanga Parbat (20.3%), Dhaulagiri (15.4%) and Kangchenjunga (14.1%).[25] Other statistical sources including MountainIQ, used a mix of data periods from 1900 to Spring 2021 but had similar results showing Annapurna still being the deadliest mountain (27.2%), followed by K2 (22.8%), Nanga Parbat (20.75%), Kangchenjunga (15%), and Dhaulagiri (13.5%).[26][24] Cho Oyu as the safest at 1.4%.[25][26]
  • Narrow death rate: The drawback of the first metric is that it includes the deaths of any support climbers or climbing sherpas that went above base camp in assisting the climb; therefore, rather than being the probability that a climber will die attempting to summit an eight-thousander, it is more akin to the total human cost in getting a climber to the summit.[28] In the Himalayan Database (HDB) tables, the climber (or member) "Death Rate" is the ratio of deaths above base camp, of all climbers who were hoping to summit and who went above base camp (calculated for 1950 to 2009), and is closer to a true probability of death (see table below).[28] The data is only for the Nepalese Himalaya and therefore does not include K2 or Nanga Parbat.[28] HDB estimates that the probability of death for a climber who is attempting the summit of an eight-thousander is still highest for Annapurna I (4%), followed by Kangchenjunga (3%) and Dhaulagiri (3%); the safest mountain is still Cho Oyu at 0.6%.[28]

The summary tables from the HDB report for all mountains above 8,000 meters also imply that the death rate of climbers for the period 1990 to 2009 (e.g. modern expeditions), is roughly half that of the combined 1950 to 2009 period, i.e. climbing is becoming safer for the climbers attempting the summit.[28]

List of first ascents

From 1950 to 1964, all 14 of the eight-thousanders were summited in the summer (the first was Annapurna I in 1950, and the last was Shishapangma in 1964), and from 1980 to 2021, all 14 were summited in the winter (the first being Everest in 1980, and the last being K2 in 2021).

Selected data for the 14 eight-thousanders[29][30]
Mountain[29] First ascent[29] First winter ascent[29] From 1950 to March 2012[30] Climber
Death
Rate
[28][31][b]
Name Height[32] Prom.[32] Country Date Summiter(s) Date Summiter(s) Total
Ascents[c]
Total
Deaths[a]
Deaths/
Ascents[d]
Everest 8,849 m
(29,032 ft)[33]
8,849 m
(29,032 ft)
  Nepal
  China
29 May 1953   Edmund Hillary

  Tenzing Norgay
on British expedition

17 February 1980
  Krzysztof Wielicki
  Leszek Cichy
5656 223 3.9% 1.52%
K2 8,611 m
(28,251 ft)
4,020 m
(13,190 ft)
  Pakistan
  China[34]
31 July 1954   Achille Compagnoni
  Lino Lacedelli

on Italian expedition

16 January 2021[8]    Nirmal Purja[38]

  Gelje Sherpa
  Mingma David Sherpa
  Mingma Gyalje Sherpa
  Sona Sherpa
  Mingma Tenzi Sherpa
  Pem Chhiri Sherpa
  Dawa Temba Sherpa
  Kili Pemba Sherpa
  Dawa Tenjing Sherpa

306 81 26.5% [e]
Kangchenjunga 8,586 m
(28,169 ft)
3,922 m
(12,867 ft)
  Nepal
  India[39]
25 May 1955   George Band
  Joe Brown
on British expedition
11 January 1986   Krzysztof Wielicki
  Jerzy Kukuczka
283 40 14.1% 3.00%
Lhotse 8,516 m
(27,940 ft)
610 m
(2,000 ft)
  Nepal
  China
18 May 1956   Fritz Luchsinger
  Ernst Reiss
31 December 1988   Krzysztof Wielicki 461 13 2.8% 1.03%
Makalu 8,485 m
(27,838 ft)
2,378 m
(7,802 ft)
  Nepal
  China
15 May 1955   Jean Couzy
  Lionel Terray
on French expedition
9 February 2009   Simone Moro
  Denis Urubko
361 31 8.6% 1.63%
Cho Oyu 8,188 m
(26,864 ft)
2,344 m
(7,690 ft)
  Nepal
  China
19 October 1954   Joseph Joechler
  Pasang Dawa Lama
  Herbert Tichy
12 February 1985   Maciej Berbeka
  Maciej Pawlikowski
3138 44 1.4% 0.64%
Dhaulagiri I 8,167 m
(26,795 ft)
3,357 m
(11,014 ft)
  Nepal 13 May 1960   Kurt Diemberger
  Peter Diener
  Nawang Dorje
  Nima Dorje
  Ernst Forrer
  Albin Schelbert
21 January 1985   Andrzej Czok
  Jerzy Kukuczka
448 69 15.4% 2.94%
Manaslu 8,163 m
(26,781 ft)
3,092 m
(10,144 ft)
  Nepal 9 May 1956   Toshio Imanishi
  Gyalzen Norbu
12 January 1984   Maciej Berbeka
  Ryszard Gajewski
661 65 9.8% 2.77%
Nanga Parbat 8,125 m
(26,657 ft)
4,608 m
(15,118 ft)
  Pakistan 3 July 1953   Hermann Buhl
on German–Austrian expedition
26 February 2016   Muhammad Ali Sadpara
  Simone Moro
  Alex Txikon
335 68 20.3% [e]
Annapurna I 8,091 m
(26,545 ft)
2,984 m
(9,790 ft)
  Nepal 3 June 1950   Maurice Herzog
  Louis Lachenal

on French expedition

3 February 1987   Jerzy Kukuczka
  Artur Hajzer
191 61 31.9% 4.05%
Gasherbrum I
(Hidden Peak)
8,080 m
(26,510 ft)
2,155 m
(7,070 ft)
  Pakistan
  China
5 July 1958   Andrew Kauffman
  Pete Schoening
9 March 2012   Adam Bielecki
  Janusz Gołąb
334 29 8.7% [e]
Broad Peak 8,051 m
(26,414 ft)
1,701 m
(5,581 ft)
  Pakistan
  China
9 June 1957   Fritz Wintersteller
  Marcus Schmuck
  Kurt Diemberger
  Hermann Buhl
5 March 2013   Maciej Berbeka
  Adam Bielecki
  Tomasz Kowalski
  Artur Małek
404 21 5.2% [e]
Gasherbrum II 8,034 m
(26,358 ft)
1,524 m
(5,000 ft)
  Pakistan
  China
7 July 1956   Fritz Moravec
  Josef Larch
  Hans Willenpart
2 February 2011   Simone Moro
  Denis Urubko
  Cory Richards
930 21 2.3% [e]
Shishapangma 8,027 m
(26,335 ft)
2,897 m
(9,505 ft)
  China 2 May 1964   Xu Jing
  Chang Chun-yen
  Wang Fuzhou
  Chen San
  Cheng Tien-liang
  Wu Tsung-yue
  Sodnam Doji
  Migmar Trashi
  Doji
  Yonten
14 January 2005   Piotr Morawski
  Simone Moro
302 25 8.3%

List of climbers of all 14

First to climb all 14 eight thousanders
 
Reinhold Messner, first to climb all 14, and without supplementary oxygen.
 
Edurne Pasaban, the first woman to climb all 14 after Oh Eun-sun's claim was disputed.
 
Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner, the first woman to climb all 14 without supplementary oxygen.

There is no single undisputed source for verified Himalayan ascents; however, Elizabeth Hawley's The Himalayan Database,[40] is considered as an important source for verified ascents for the Nepalese Himalayas.[41][42] Online databases of Himalayan ascents pay close regard to The Himalayan Database, including the website AdventureStats.com,[43] and the Eberhard Jurgalski List.[1][44][45]

Various mountaineering journals, including the Alpine Journal and the American Alpine Journal, maintain extensive records and archives on expeditions to the eight-thousanders, but do not always opine on disputed ascents, and nor do they maintain registers of verified ascents.[1][44]

Verified ascents

  First male to summit all 14 eight-thousanders, and first to do so without supplementary oxygen
  First female to summit all 14 eight-thousanders; with supplementary oxygen
  First female to summit all 14 eight-thousanders; no supplementary oxygen
  Fastest ascent of all 14 eight-thousanders; with supplementary oxygen
  Fastest ascent of all 14 eight-thousanders; no supplementary oxygen
  Youngest person to climb all 14 eight-thousanders
  First disabled person to have summited all 14 eight-thousanders

The "No O2" column lists people who have climbed all 14 eight-thousanders without supplementary oxygen.

List of climbers who have summited all 14 eight-thousanders[46]
Order Order
(No O2)
Name Period climbing
eight-thousanders
Born Age Nationality
1 1 Reinhold Messner 1970–1986 1944 42   Italian
2 Jerzy Kukuczka 1979–1987 1948 39   Polish
3 2 Erhard Loretan 1982–1995 1959 36   Swiss
4 [47] Carlos Carsolio 1985–1996 1962 33   Mexican
5 Krzysztof Wielicki 1980–1996 1950 46   Polish
6 3 Juanito Oiarzabal 1985–1999 1956 43   Spanish
7 Sergio Martini 1983–2000 1949 51   Italian
8 Park Young-seok 1993–2001 1963 38   Korean
9 Um Hong-gil 1988–2001 1960[48] 40   Korean
10 4 Alberto Iñurrategi 1991–2002[49] 1968 33   Spanish
11 Han Wang-yong 1994–2003 1966 37   Korean
12 5[50] Ed Viesturs 1989–2005 1959 46   American
13 6[51][52][53] Silvio Mondinelli 1993–2007 1958 49   Italian
14 7[54] Ivan Vallejo 1997–2008 1959 49   Ecuadorian
15 8[55] Denis Urubko 2000–2009 1973 35   Kazakhstani
16 Ralf Dujmovits 1990–2009 1961[56] 47   German
17[57] 9[58] Veikka Gustafsson 1993–2009 1968 41   Finnish
18[59] Andrew Lock 1993–2009 1961[60] 48   Australian
19 10 João Garcia 1993–2010 1967 43   Portuguese
20[61] Piotr Pustelnik 1990–2010 1951 58   Polish
21[62] Edurne Pasaban 2001–2010 1973 36   Spanish
22[63] Abele Blanc 1992–2011[64][65] 1954 56   Italian
23 Mingma Sherpa 2000–2011[64] 1978 33   Nepali
24 11 Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner 1998–2011[64] 1970 40   Austrian
25 Vassily Pivtsov [de] 2001–2011[64] 1975 36   Kazakhstani
26 12 Maxut Zhumayev 2001–2011[64] 1977 34   Kazakhstani
27 Kim Jae-soo [de] 2000–2011[64] 1961 50   Korean
28[66] 13 Mario Panzeri 1988–2012 1964 48   Italian
29[67] Hirotaka Takeuchi 1995–2012[67] 1971 41   Japanese
30 Chhang Dawa Sherpa 2001–2013[64] 1982 30   Nepali
31 14 Kim Chang-ho 2005–2013[64] 1970 43   Korean
32 Jorge Egocheaga [eu] 2002–2014[68] 1968 45   Spanish
33 15 Radek Jaroš 1998–2014[64] 1964 50   Czech
34/35[69] 16/17[69] Nives Meroi 1998–2017[70][71] 1961 55   Italian
34/35[69] 16/17[69] Romano Benet [it] 1998–2017[70][71][72] 1962 55   Italian /   Slovenian
36 Peter Hámor [sk] 1998–2017[73][74][75] 1964 52   Slovak
37 18 Azim Gheychisaz 2008–2017[76] 1981 37   Iranian
38 Ferran Latorre 1999–2017[77] 1970 46   Spanish
39 19 Òscar Cadiach 1984–2017[78] 1952 64   Spanish
40 Kim Mi-gon 2000–2018[79][80] 1973 45   Korean
41 Sanu Sherpa 2006–2019[81] 1975 44   Nepali
42 Nirmal Purja 2014–2019[21][82][f] 1983 36  British[35][36][37]
43 Mingma Gyabu Sherpa 2010–2019[83][84] 1989 30   Nepali
44 Kim Hong-bin 2006–2021[85][86][87] 1964 57   Korean
45 Nima Gyalzen Sherpa 2004–2022[88][89] 1985 37   Nepali
46 Dong Hong Juan 2013-2023[90][91]   Chinese
47 Kristin Harila 2022–2023[92][93] 1986 37  Norwegian

Disputed ascents

Claims have been made for summiting all 14 peaks for which not enough evidence was provided to verify the ascent; the disputed ascent in each claim is shown in parentheses in the table below. In most cases, the Himalayan chronicler Elizabeth Hawley is considered a definitive source regarding the facts of the dispute. Her The Himalayan Database is the source for other online Himalayan ascent databases (e.g. AdventureStats.com).[41][42] The Eberhard Jurgalski List is also another important source for independent verification of claims to have summited all 14 eight-thousanders.[1][44]

Name and details Period climbing
eight-thousanders
Born Age Nationality
Fausto De Stefani [it] (Lhotse 1997)[94]
His partner Sergio Martini reclimbed Lhotse in 2000 to verify his 14, see above.
1983–1998 1952 46   Italian
Alan Hinkes (Cho Oyu 1990)[95][96]
Hinkes rejected Hawley's decision to "unrecognise" his ascent, see "Cho Oyu dispute".
1987–2005 1954 53   British
Vladislav Terzyul (Shishapangma (West) 2000, Broad Peak 1995[97][98])[99][100]
As he did not claim the main summit of Shishapangma, this status is unlikely to change.
1993–2004
(deceased)
1953 49   Ukrainian
Oh Eun-sun (Kangchenjunga 2009)[101][102][103]
As the potential first female climber of all 14, this dispute was followed internationally.[102]
1997–2010 1966 44   Korean
Carlos Pauner [es] (Shishapangma 2012)[104]
Pauner acknowledged his uncertainty as it was dark; said he might reclimb.[105]
2001–2013 1963 50   Spanish
Zhang Liang (Shishapangma 2018)[106][107][108]
Suspected the 2018 Chinese Shishapangma expedition stopped at central summit.
2000–2018 1964 54   Chinese

Verification issues

A recurrent problem with verification is the confirmation that the climber reached the true peak of the eight-thousander. Eight-thousanders present unique problems in this regard as they are so infrequently summited, their summits have not yet been exhaustively surveyed, and summiting climbers are often suffering the extreme altitude and weather effects of being in the death zone.[1][44]

Cho Oyu for example, is a recurrent problem eight-thousander as its true peak is a small hump about a thirty minutes walk into the large flat summit plateau that lies in the death zone. The true peak is often obscured in very poor weather, and this led to the disputed ascent (per the table above) of British climber, Alan Hinkes (who has refused to re-climb the peak).[109][110] Shishapangma is another problem peak because of its dual summits, which despite being close in height, are up to two hours climbing time apart and require the crossing of an exposed and dangerous snow ridge.[1][111] When Hawley judged that Ed Viesturs had not reached the true summit of Shishapangma (which she deduced from his summit photos and interviews), he then re-climbed the mountain to definitively establish his ascent.[112][1]

In a May 2021 interview with the New York Times, Jurgalski pointed out further issues with false summits on Annapurna I (a long ridge with multiple summits), Dhaulagiri (misleading false summit metal pole), and Manaslu (additional sharp and dangerous ridge to the true summit, like Shishapangma), noting that of the existing 44 accepted claims (as per the table earlier), at least 7 had serious question marks (these were in addition to the table of disputed ascents), and even noting that "It is possible that no one has ever been on the true summit of all 14 of the 8,000-meter peaks".[1] In June 2021, Australian climber Damien Gildea wrote an article in the American Alpine Journal on the work that Jurgalski and a team of international experts were doing in this area, including publishing detailed surveys of the problem summits using data from the German Aerospace Center.[44]

In July 2022, Jurgalski posted conclusions of the team's research (the wider team being of Rodolphe Popier and Tobias Pantel of The Himalayan Database, and Damien Gildea, Federico Bernardi, Bob Schelfhout Aubertijn, and Thaneswar Guragai). According to their analysis, only three climbers, Ed Viesturs, Veikka Gustafsson and Nirmal Purja have stood on the true summit of all 14 eight-thousanders, and no female climber had yet done so.[2] Viesturs is also the first to have done so without the use of oxygen.[2] Jurgalski allowed for the fact that they had deliberately not stood on the true summit of Kangchenjunga out of religious respect.[2] The team has not formally published their work, and according to Popier, they had not decided about "the best respectful form to present it".[2]

Proposed expansion

In 2012, to relieve capacity pressure and overcrowding on the world's highest mountain, greater restrictions were placed on expeditions to the summit of Mount Everest.[113] To address the growing capacity constraints, Nepal lobbied the International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation (or UIAA) to reclassify five subsidiary summits (two on Lhotse and three on Kanchenjunga), as standalone eight-thousanders, while Pakistan lobbied for a sixth subsidiary summit (on Broad Peak) as a standalone eight-thousander.[114] See table below for list of all subsidiary summits of eight-thousander mountains.

In 2012, the UIAA initiated the ARUGA Project, with an aim to see if these six new 8,000 m (26,247 ft)-plus peaks could feasibly achieve international recognition.[114] The proposed six new eight-thousander peaks have a topographic prominence above 60 m (197 ft), but none would meet the wider UIAA prominence threshold of 600 m (1,969 ft) (the lowest prominence of the existing 14 eight-thousanders is Lhotse, at 610 metres (2,001 ft)).[115][116] Critics noted that of the six proposed, only Broad Peak Central, with a prominence of 181 metres (594 ft), would even meet the 150 metres (492 ft) prominence threshold to be a British Isles Marilyn.[115] The appeal noted the UIAA's 1994 reclassification of Alpine four-thousander peaks used a prominence threshold of 30 m (98 ft),[g] amongst other criteria; the logic being that if 30 m (98 ft) worked for 4,000 m (13,123 ft) summits, then 60 m (197 ft) is proportional for 8,000 m (26,247 ft) summits.[117]

As of November 2018, there has been no conclusion by the UIAA and the proposals appear to have been set aside.

  Proposed to the UIAA in 2012 for reclassification as standalone eight-thousanders.[114]
List of the subsidiary peaks of the 14 eight-thousanders.[118]
Proposed new eight-thousander Height
(m)
Prominence
(m)
Dominance
(Prom / Height)[119]
Dominance
classification[119]
Broad Peak Central 8011 181 2,26 B2
Kangchenjunga W-Peak (Yalung Kang) 8505 135 1,59 C1
Kangchenjunga S-Peak 8476 116 1,37 C2
Kangchenjunga C-Peak 8473 63 0,74 C2
Lhotse C-Peak I (Lhotse Middle) 8410 65 0,77 C2
Lhotse Shar 8382 72 0,86 C2
K 2 SW-Peak 8580 30 0,35 D1
Lhotse C-Peak II 8372 37 0,44 D1
Everest W-Peak 8296 30 0,36 D1
Yalung Kang Shoulder 8200 40 0,49 D1
Kangchenjunga SE-Peak 8150 30 0,37 D1
K 2 P. 8134 (SW-Ridge) 8134 35 0,43 D1
Annapurna C-Peak 8013 49 0,61 D1
Nanga Parbat S-Peak 8042 30 0,37 D1
Annapurna E-Peak 7986 65 0,81 C2
Shisha Pangma C-Peak 8008 30 0,37 D1
Everest NE-Shoulder 8423 19 0,23 D2
Everest NE-Pinnacle III 8383 13 0,16 D2
Lhotse N-Pinnacle III 8327 10 0,12 D2
Lhotse N-Pinnacle II 8307 12 0,14 D2
Lhotse N-Pinnacle I 8290 10 0,12 D2
Everest NE-Pinnacle II 8282 25 0,30 D2

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b As recorded by Eberhard Jurgalski and being any death (climber or other) above Base Camp.[25]
  2. ^ Per The Himalayan Database (HDB) tables, the Climber (or Member) Death Rate is the ratio of deaths above base camp, of all climbers who were hoping to summit and who went above base camp, for 1950 to 2009, and is closer to a true probability of death; the data is only for Nepalese Himalaya. Summary tables from the HDB report for all mountains above 8,000 metres, imply that the death rate for the period 1990 to 2009 (e.g. modern expeditions), is roughly half that of the combined 1950 to 2009 period.[28]
  3. ^ As recorded by Eberhard Jurgalski
  4. ^ This should not be mistaken as being a death rate; it does not imply a probability of death for a climber attempting to climb an eight-thousander as it includes all deaths from all activities undertaken above base camp (e.g. training or reconnaissance trips, camp stocking activities by porters who will not be summiting the mountain, rescue attempts etc.). It, therefore, compares deaths from the larger group of people who were, and were not, making a summit attempt, with the smaller group who were making a summit attempt. While it is not a probability, the statistic does reflect the ratio of people who died above base camp for each climber who summited.
  5. ^ a b c d e Data is not available for the Pakistani Himalayas
  6. ^ Nirmal Purja climbed all fourteen 8,000m peaks between April 2019 and October 2019, but climbed his first, Dhaulagiri, in 2014.
  7. ^ The UIAA main list also includes summits that have a prominence far lower than 30 metres.

References

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  109. ^ I have summited Cho Oyu 4 times and will be heading for my fifth this coming season. Each time I have watched the Koreans and Japanese go only to where they can see Everest, not the summit because they know this is what will be asked."Cho Oyu summit: Where is it exactly". Explorersweb.com. September 2017.
  110. ^ Many people who climb Cho Oyu in Tibet stop at a set of prayer flags with views of Everest and believe they’ve reached the top, unaware they still have to walk for 15 minutes across the summit plateau until they can see the Gokyo Lakes in Nepal."When is a summit not a summit?". Mark Horrell. 12 November 2014.
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  115. ^ a b "Do we really need more 8000m peaks". Mark Horrell. 23 October 2013. The most prominent one, Broad Peak Central is just 196m high and the least prominent, Lhotse Middle, is a meagre 60m. To put this in context, the highest mountain in Malta is 253m, while the Eiffel Tower stands a whopping 300m.
  116. ^ "A funny name for a mountain". Mark Horrell. 4 June 2014.
  117. ^ "UIAA Mountain Classification: 4,000ERS OF THE ALPS". UIAA. March 1994. Topographic criterium: for each summit, the level difference between it and the highest adjacent pass or notch should be at least 30 m (98 ft) (calculated as average of the summits at the limit of acceptability). An additional criterium can be the horizontal distance between a summit and the base of another adjacent 4000er.
  118. ^ Eberhard Jurgalski [in German]. "Subsidiary Peaks". 8000ers.com. Retrieved 23 November 2018. There are several different subsidiary peaks! Here are the geographical facts, from the one "relative independent Main-Peak" (EU category B) over the important subsidiary peaks (C) to the major notable points (D1) Especially the last category is just guessed by contours or from photographs.
  119. ^ a b Eberhard Jurgalski [in German]. "Dominance". 8000ers.com. Retrieved 23 November 2018. Accordingly, the author introduced altitude classes (AC) and a proportional prominence, which he named orometrical dominance (D). D is calculated easily but fittingly: (P/Alt) x 100. Thus, it indicates the percentage of independence for every elevation, no matter what the altitude, prominence or mountain type it is. From a scientific point of view, altitude could be seen as the thesis, prominence as the antithesis, whereas dominance would be the synthesis.

External links

  • 8000ers.com, a site dedicated to statistics on 8000m peaks and climbs
  • PeakBagger.com World 8000-meter Peaks, a database of global peaks
  • The Himalayan Database, statistics on Nepalese Himalayan (but not Pakistan Himalaya) climbs from 1905 to 2018
  • Graphical Interface for The Himalayan Database
  • AdventureStats.com (High Altitude Mountaineering), a site dedicated to recording adventure statistics
  • NASA Earth Observatory: The Eight-Thousanders
  • Eight Thousanders Tracking Expeditons On Line from Alpinismonline Magazine

eight, thousander, international, mountaineering, climbing, federation, uiaa, recognises, eight, thousanders, mountains, that, more, than, metres, height, above, level, considered, sufficiently, independent, neighbouring, peaks, there, precise, definition, cri. The International Mountaineering and Climbing Federation UIAA recognises eight thousanders as the 14 mountains that are more than 8 000 metres 26 247 ft in height above sea level and are considered to be sufficiently independent of neighbouring peaks There is no precise definition of the criteria used to assess independence and since 2012 the UIAA has been involved in a process to consider whether the list should be expanded to 20 mountains All eight thousanders are located in the Himalayan and Karakoram mountain ranges in Asia and their summits are in the death zone Locations of the world s 14 eight thousanders which are split between the Himalayan right and the Karakoram mountain ranges left From 1950 to 1964 all 14 eight thousanders were summited in the summer the first was Annapurna I in 1950 and the last was Shishapangma in 1964 and from 1980 to 2021 all 14 were summited in the winter the first being Mount Everest in 1980 and the last being K2 in 2021 On a variety of statistical techniques the deadliest eight thousander is Annapurna I one death climber or climber support for every three summiters followed by K2 and Nanga Parbat one death for every four to five summiters and then Dhaulagiri and Kangchenjunga one for every six to seven summiters The first person to summit all 14 eight thousanders was Italian Reinhold Messner in 1986 who did not use supplementary oxygen In 2010 Spaniard Edurne Pasaban became the first woman to summit all 14 but with the aid of supplementary oxygen In 2011 Austrian Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner became the first woman to summit all 14 without the aid of supplementary oxygen In 2013 South Korean Kim Chang ho climbed all 14 in 7 years and 310 days without the aid of supplementary oxygen In 2019 British Nepalese climber Nirmal Purja climbed all 14 in 6 months and 6 days with supplementary oxygen In July 2022 Sanu Sherpa became the first person to summit all 14 eight thousanders twice which he did over the period 2006 to 2022 Issues with false summits e g Cho Oyu Annapurna I and Dhaulagiri or separated dual summits e g Shishapangma and Manaslu have led to disputed claims of ascents 1 In 2022 after several years of research a team of experts reported that only three climbers Ed Viesturs Veikka Gustafsson and Nirmal Purja had actually stood on the true summit of all 14 eight thousanders 2 Contents 1 Climbing history 1 1 First ascents 1 2 All 14 1 3 Deadliest 2 List of first ascents 3 List of climbers of all 14 3 1 Verified ascents 3 2 Disputed ascents 3 3 Verification issues 4 Proposed expansion 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksClimbing history EditFirst ascents Edit Flight over Khumbu region six eight thousanders are visible The first recorded attempt on an eight thousander was when Albert F Mummery Geoffrey Hastings and J Norman Collie tried to climb Pakistan s Nanga Parbat in 1895 The attempt failed when Mummery and two Gurkhas Ragobir Thapa and Goman Singh were killed by an avalanche 3 The first recorded successful ascent of an eight thousander was by the French Maurice Herzog and Louis Lachenal who reached the summit of Annapurna on 3 June 1950 during the 1950 French Annapurna expedition 4 Due to its location in Tibet Shishapangma was the last eight thousander to be ascended which was completed by a Chinese team led by Xu Jing in 1964 western China s mountains were closed to foreign travel until 1978 5 The first winter ascent of an eight thousander was by a Polish team led by Andrzej Zawada on Mount Everest with Leszek Cichy and Krzysztof Wielicki reaching the summit on 17 February 1980 6 all Polish teams would complete nine of the first fourteen winter ascents of eight thousanders 7 The final eight thousander to be climbed in winter was K2 whose summit was ascended by a 10 person Nepalese team on 16 January 2021 8 Only two climbers have completed more than one first ascent of an eight thousander Hermann Buhl Nanga Parbat and Broad Peak and Kurt Diemberger Broad Peak and Dhaulagiri Buhl s summit of Nanga Parbat in 1953 is notable as being the only solo first ascent of one of the eight thousanders The Polish climber Jerzy Kukuczka is noted for creating over ten new routes on various eight thousander mountains 7 Italian climber Simone Moro made the first winter ascent of four eight thousander mountains Shishapangma Makalu Gasherbrum II and Nanga Parbat 9 while two Polish climbers have each made three first winter ascents of an eight thousander Krzysztof Wielicki Everest Kangchenjunga and Lhotse and Jerzy Kukuczka Dhaulagiri I Kangchenjunga and Annapurna I 7 All 14 Edit Comparison of the heights of the Eight thousanders red triangles with the Seven Summits and Seven Second Summits The 30 highest peaks in the world with over 500 m 1 640 ft in prominence 10 On 16 October 1986 Italian Reinhold Messner became the first person to climb all 14 eight thousanders In 1987 Polish climber Jerzy Kukuczka became the second person to accomplish this feat 7 Messner summited each of the 14 peaks without the aid of bottled oxygen a feat that was only repeated by the Swiss Erhard Loretan nine years later in 1995 Kukuczka had used supplementary oxygen while summiting Everest and on no other eight thousander 7 11 On 17 May 2010 Spanish climber Edurne Pasaban became the first woman to summit all 14 eight thousanders 12 In August 2011 Austrian climber Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner became the first woman to climb the 14 eight thousanders without the use of supplementary oxygen 13 14 The first couple and team to summit all 14 eight thousanders were the Italians Nives Meroi who was the second woman to accomplish this feat without supplementary oxygen and her husband Romano Benet it on 11 May 2017 15 16 The couple climbed alpine style without the use of supplementary oxygen or other support 16 17 Nepali mountain guide Kami Rita holds the record for the most ascents of an eight thousander peak at 39 a feat he achieved on 7 May 2022 by summiting Everest for the 26th time which was also a record for the most summits of Everest by a climber 18 On 20 May 2013 South Korean climber Kim Chang ho set a new speed record of climbing all 14 eight thousanders without the use of supplementary oxygen in 7 years and 310 days On 29 October 2019 the British Nepali climber Nirmal Purja set a speed record for climbing all 14 eight thousanders with the use of supplementary oxygen in 6 months and 6 days 19 20 21 In July 2022 Sanu Sherpa became the first person to summit all 14 eight thousanders twice 22 He started with Cho Oyu in 2006 and completed the double by summiting Gasherbrum II in July 2022 23 Deadliest Edit See also List of deaths on eight thousanders The extreme altitude and the fact that the summits of all eight thousanders lie in the Death Zone mean that climber mortality or death rate is particularly high 24 Two metrics are quoted to establish a death rate i e broad and narrow that are used to rank the eight thousanders in order of deadliest note that they are also the world s overall deadliest mountains 25 26 Broad death rate The first metric is the ratio of successful climbers summiting to total deaths a on the mountain over a given period 25 The Guinness Book of World Records uses this metric to name Annapurna I as the deadliest eight thousander and the world s deadliest mountain with roughly one person dying for every three people who successfully summit i e a ratio of circa 30 27 Using consistent data from 1950 to 2012 mountaineering statistician Eberhard Jurgalski see table below used this metric to show Annapurna is the deadliest mountain 31 9 followed by K2 26 5 Nanga Parbat 20 3 Dhaulagiri 15 4 and Kangchenjunga 14 1 25 Other statistical sources including MountainIQ used a mix of data periods from 1900 to Spring 2021 but had similar results showing Annapurna still being the deadliest mountain 27 2 followed by K2 22 8 Nanga Parbat 20 75 Kangchenjunga 15 and Dhaulagiri 13 5 26 24 Cho Oyu as the safest at 1 4 25 26 Narrow death rate The drawback of the first metric is that it includes the deaths of any support climbers or climbing sherpas that went above base camp in assisting the climb therefore rather than being the probability that a climber will die attempting to summit an eight thousander it is more akin to the total human cost in getting a climber to the summit 28 In the Himalayan Database HDB tables the climber or member Death Rate is the ratio of deaths above base camp of all climbers who were hoping to summit and who went above base camp calculated for 1950 to 2009 and is closer to a true probability of death see table below 28 The data is only for the Nepalese Himalaya and therefore does not include K2 or Nanga Parbat 28 HDB estimates that the probability of death for a climber who is attempting the summit of an eight thousander is still highest for Annapurna I 4 followed by Kangchenjunga 3 and Dhaulagiri 3 the safest mountain is still Cho Oyu at 0 6 28 The summary tables from the HDB report for all mountains above 8 000 meters also imply that the death rate of climbers for the period 1990 to 2009 e g modern expeditions is roughly half that of the combined 1950 to 2009 period i e climbing is becoming safer for the climbers attempting the summit 28 List of first ascents EditFrom 1950 to 1964 all 14 of the eight thousanders were summited in the summer the first was Annapurna I in 1950 and the last was Shishapangma in 1964 and from 1980 to 2021 all 14 were summited in the winter the first being Everest in 1980 and the last being K2 in 2021 Selected data for the 14 eight thousanders 29 30 Mountain 29 First ascent 29 First winter ascent 29 From 1950 to March 2012 30 ClimberDeathRate 28 31 b Name Height 32 Prom 32 Country Date Summiter s Date Summiter s TotalAscents c TotalDeaths a Deaths Ascents d Everest 8 849 m 29 032 ft 33 8 849 m 29 032 ft Nepal China 29 May 1953 Edmund Hillary Tenzing Norgay on British expedition 17 February 1980 Krzysztof Wielicki Leszek Cichy 5656 223 3 9 1 52 K2 8 611 m 28 251 ft 4 020 m 13 190 ft Pakistan China 34 31 July 1954 Achille Compagnoni Lino Lacedelli on Italian expedition 16 January 2021 8 Nirmal Purja 38 Gelje Sherpa Mingma David Sherpa Mingma Gyalje Sherpa Sona Sherpa Mingma Tenzi Sherpa Pem Chhiri Sherpa Dawa Temba Sherpa Kili Pemba Sherpa Dawa Tenjing Sherpa 306 81 26 5 e Kangchenjunga 8 586 m 28 169 ft 3 922 m 12 867 ft Nepal India 39 25 May 1955 George Band Joe Brown on British expedition 11 January 1986 Krzysztof Wielicki Jerzy Kukuczka 283 40 14 1 3 00 Lhotse 8 516 m 27 940 ft 610 m 2 000 ft Nepal China 18 May 1956 Fritz Luchsinger Ernst Reiss 31 December 1988 Krzysztof Wielicki 461 13 2 8 1 03 Makalu 8 485 m 27 838 ft 2 378 m 7 802 ft Nepal China 15 May 1955 Jean Couzy Lionel Terrayon French expedition 9 February 2009 Simone Moro Denis Urubko 361 31 8 6 1 63 Cho Oyu 8 188 m 26 864 ft 2 344 m 7 690 ft Nepal China 19 October 1954 Joseph Joechler Pasang Dawa Lama Herbert Tichy 12 February 1985 Maciej Berbeka Maciej Pawlikowski 3138 44 1 4 0 64 Dhaulagiri I 8 167 m 26 795 ft 3 357 m 11 014 ft Nepal 13 May 1960 Kurt Diemberger Peter Diener Nawang Dorje Nima Dorje Ernst Forrer Albin Schelbert 21 January 1985 Andrzej Czok Jerzy Kukuczka 448 69 15 4 2 94 Manaslu 8 163 m 26 781 ft 3 092 m 10 144 ft Nepal 9 May 1956 Toshio Imanishi Gyalzen Norbu 12 January 1984 Maciej Berbeka Ryszard Gajewski 661 65 9 8 2 77 Nanga Parbat 8 125 m 26 657 ft 4 608 m 15 118 ft Pakistan 3 July 1953 Hermann Buhl on German Austrian expedition 26 February 2016 Muhammad Ali Sadpara Simone Moro Alex Txikon 335 68 20 3 e Annapurna I 8 091 m 26 545 ft 2 984 m 9 790 ft Nepal 3 June 1950 Maurice Herzog Louis Lachenal on French expedition 3 February 1987 Jerzy Kukuczka Artur Hajzer 191 61 31 9 4 05 Gasherbrum I Hidden Peak 8 080 m 26 510 ft 2 155 m 7 070 ft Pakistan China 5 July 1958 Andrew Kauffman Pete Schoening 9 March 2012 Adam Bielecki Janusz Golab 334 29 8 7 e Broad Peak 8 051 m 26 414 ft 1 701 m 5 581 ft Pakistan China 9 June 1957 Fritz Wintersteller Marcus Schmuck Kurt Diemberger Hermann Buhl 5 March 2013 Maciej Berbeka Adam Bielecki Tomasz Kowalski Artur Malek 404 21 5 2 e Gasherbrum II 8 034 m 26 358 ft 1 524 m 5 000 ft Pakistan China 7 July 1956 Fritz Moravec Josef Larch Hans Willenpart 2 February 2011 Simone Moro Denis Urubko Cory Richards 930 21 2 3 e Shishapangma 8 027 m 26 335 ft 2 897 m 9 505 ft China 2 May 1964 Xu Jing Chang Chun yen Wang Fuzhou Chen San Cheng Tien liang Wu Tsung yue Sodnam Doji Migmar Trashi Doji Yonten 14 January 2005 Piotr Morawski Simone Moro 302 25 8 3 List of climbers of all 14 EditFirst to climb all 14 eight thousanders Reinhold Messner first to climb all 14 and without supplementary oxygen Edurne Pasaban the first woman to climb all 14 after Oh Eun sun s claim was disputed Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner the first woman to climb all 14 without supplementary oxygen There is no single undisputed source for verified Himalayan ascents however Elizabeth Hawley s The Himalayan Database 40 is considered as an important source for verified ascents for the Nepalese Himalayas 41 42 Online databases of Himalayan ascents pay close regard to The Himalayan Database including the website AdventureStats com 43 and the Eberhard Jurgalski List 1 44 45 Various mountaineering journals including the Alpine Journal and the American Alpine Journal maintain extensive records and archives on expeditions to the eight thousanders but do not always opine on disputed ascents and nor do they maintain registers of verified ascents 1 44 Verified ascents Edit First male to summit all 14 eight thousanders and first to do so without supplementary oxygen First female to summit all 14 eight thousanders with supplementary oxygen First female to summit all 14 eight thousanders no supplementary oxygen Fastest ascent of all 14 eight thousanders with supplementary oxygen Fastest ascent of all 14 eight thousanders no supplementary oxygen Youngest person to climb all 14 eight thousanders First disabled person to have summited all 14 eight thousanders The No O2 column lists people who have climbed all 14 eight thousanders without supplementary oxygen List of climbers who have summited all 14 eight thousanders 46 Order Order No O2 Name Period climbingeight thousanders Born Age Nationality1 1 Reinhold Messner 1970 1986 1944 42 Italian2 Jerzy Kukuczka 1979 1987 1948 39 Polish3 2 Erhard Loretan 1982 1995 1959 36 Swiss4 47 Carlos Carsolio 1985 1996 1962 33 Mexican5 Krzysztof Wielicki 1980 1996 1950 46 Polish6 3 Juanito Oiarzabal 1985 1999 1956 43 Spanish7 Sergio Martini 1983 2000 1949 51 Italian8 Park Young seok 1993 2001 1963 38 Korean9 Um Hong gil 1988 2001 1960 48 40 Korean10 4 Alberto Inurrategi 1991 2002 49 1968 33 Spanish11 Han Wang yong 1994 2003 1966 37 Korean12 5 50 Ed Viesturs 1989 2005 1959 46 American13 6 51 52 53 Silvio Mondinelli 1993 2007 1958 49 Italian14 7 54 Ivan Vallejo 1997 2008 1959 49 Ecuadorian15 8 55 Denis Urubko 2000 2009 1973 35 Kazakhstani16 Ralf Dujmovits 1990 2009 1961 56 47 German17 57 9 58 Veikka Gustafsson 1993 2009 1968 41 Finnish18 59 Andrew Lock 1993 2009 1961 60 48 Australian19 10 Joao Garcia 1993 2010 1967 43 Portuguese20 61 Piotr Pustelnik 1990 2010 1951 58 Polish21 62 Edurne Pasaban 2001 2010 1973 36 Spanish22 63 Abele Blanc 1992 2011 64 65 1954 56 Italian23 Mingma Sherpa 2000 2011 64 1978 33 Nepali24 11 Gerlinde Kaltenbrunner 1998 2011 64 1970 40 Austrian25 Vassily Pivtsov de 2001 2011 64 1975 36 Kazakhstani26 12 Maxut Zhumayev 2001 2011 64 1977 34 Kazakhstani27 Kim Jae soo de 2000 2011 64 1961 50 Korean28 66 13 Mario Panzeri 1988 2012 1964 48 Italian29 67 Hirotaka Takeuchi 1995 2012 67 1971 41 Japanese30 Chhang Dawa Sherpa 2001 2013 64 1982 30 Nepali31 14 Kim Chang ho 2005 2013 64 1970 43 Korean32 Jorge Egocheaga eu 2002 2014 68 1968 45 Spanish33 15 Radek Jaros 1998 2014 64 1964 50 Czech34 35 69 16 17 69 Nives Meroi 1998 2017 70 71 1961 55 Italian34 35 69 16 17 69 Romano Benet it 1998 2017 70 71 72 1962 55 Italian Slovenian36 Peter Hamor sk 1998 2017 73 74 75 1964 52 Slovak37 18 Azim Gheychisaz 2008 2017 76 1981 37 Iranian38 Ferran Latorre 1999 2017 77 1970 46 Spanish39 19 Oscar Cadiach 1984 2017 78 1952 64 Spanish40 Kim Mi gon 2000 2018 79 80 1973 45 Korean41 Sanu Sherpa 2006 2019 81 1975 44 Nepali42 Nirmal Purja 2014 2019 21 82 f 1983 36 British 35 36 37 43 Mingma Gyabu Sherpa 2010 2019 83 84 1989 30 Nepali44 Kim Hong bin 2006 2021 85 86 87 1964 57 Korean45 Nima Gyalzen Sherpa 2004 2022 88 89 1985 37 Nepali46 Dong Hong Juan 2013 2023 90 91 Chinese47 Kristin Harila 2022 2023 92 93 1986 37 NorwegianDisputed ascents Edit Claims have been made for summiting all 14 peaks for which not enough evidence was provided to verify the ascent the disputed ascent in each claim is shown in parentheses in the table below In most cases the Himalayan chronicler Elizabeth Hawley is considered a definitive source regarding the facts of the dispute Her The Himalayan Database is the source for other online Himalayan ascent databases e g AdventureStats com 41 42 The Eberhard Jurgalski List is also another important source for independent verification of claims to have summited all 14 eight thousanders 1 44 Name and details Period climbingeight thousanders Born Age NationalityFausto De Stefani it Lhotse 1997 94 His partner Sergio Martini reclimbed Lhotse in 2000 to verify his 14 see above 1983 1998 1952 46 ItalianAlan Hinkes Cho Oyu 1990 95 96 Hinkes rejected Hawley s decision to unrecognise his ascent see Cho Oyu dispute 1987 2005 1954 53 BritishVladislav Terzyul Shishapangma West 2000 Broad Peak 1995 97 98 99 100 As he did not claim the main summit of Shishapangma this status is unlikely to change 1993 2004 deceased 1953 49 UkrainianOh Eun sun Kangchenjunga 2009 101 102 103 As the potential first female climber of all 14 this dispute was followed internationally 102 1997 2010 1966 44 KoreanCarlos Pauner es Shishapangma 2012 104 Pauner acknowledged his uncertainty as it was dark said he might reclimb 105 2001 2013 1963 50 SpanishZhang Liang Shishapangma 2018 106 107 108 Suspected the 2018 Chinese Shishapangma expedition stopped at central summit 2000 2018 1964 54 ChineseVerification issues Edit A recurrent problem with verification is the confirmation that the climber reached the true peak of the eight thousander Eight thousanders present unique problems in this regard as they are so infrequently summited their summits have not yet been exhaustively surveyed and summiting climbers are often suffering the extreme altitude and weather effects of being in the death zone 1 44 Cho Oyu for example is a recurrent problem eight thousander as its true peak is a small hump about a thirty minutes walk into the large flat summit plateau that lies in the death zone The true peak is often obscured in very poor weather and this led to the disputed ascent per the table above of British climber Alan Hinkes who has refused to re climb the peak 109 110 Shishapangma is another problem peak because of its dual summits which despite being close in height are up to two hours climbing time apart and require the crossing of an exposed and dangerous snow ridge 1 111 When Hawley judged that Ed Viesturs had not reached the true summit of Shishapangma which she deduced from his summit photos and interviews he then re climbed the mountain to definitively establish his ascent 112 1 In a May 2021 interview with the New York Times Jurgalski pointed out further issues with false summits on Annapurna I a long ridge with multiple summits Dhaulagiri misleading false summit metal pole and Manaslu additional sharp and dangerous ridge to the true summit like Shishapangma noting that of the existing 44 accepted claims as per the table earlier at least 7 had serious question marks these were in addition to the table of disputed ascents and even noting that It is possible that no one has ever been on the true summit of all 14 of the 8 000 meter peaks 1 In June 2021 Australian climber Damien Gildea wrote an article in the American Alpine Journal on the work that Jurgalski and a team of international experts were doing in this area including publishing detailed surveys of the problem summits using data from the German Aerospace Center 44 In July 2022 Jurgalski posted conclusions of the team s research the wider team being of Rodolphe Popier and Tobias Pantel of The Himalayan Database and Damien Gildea Federico Bernardi Bob Schelfhout Aubertijn and Thaneswar Guragai According to their analysis only three climbers Ed Viesturs Veikka Gustafsson and Nirmal Purja have stood on the true summit of all 14 eight thousanders and no female climber had yet done so 2 Viesturs is also the first to have done so without the use of oxygen 2 Jurgalski allowed for the fact that they had deliberately not stood on the true summit of Kangchenjunga out of religious respect 2 The team has not formally published their work and according to Popier they had not decided about the best respectful form to present it 2 Proposed expansion EditIn 2012 to relieve capacity pressure and overcrowding on the world s highest mountain greater restrictions were placed on expeditions to the summit of Mount Everest 113 To address the growing capacity constraints Nepal lobbied the International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation or UIAA to reclassify five subsidiary summits two on Lhotse and three on Kanchenjunga as standalone eight thousanders while Pakistan lobbied for a sixth subsidiary summit on Broad Peak as a standalone eight thousander 114 See table below for list of all subsidiary summits of eight thousander mountains In 2012 the UIAA initiated the ARUGA Project with an aim to see if these six new 8 000 m 26 247 ft plus peaks could feasibly achieve international recognition 114 The proposed six new eight thousander peaks have a topographic prominence above 60 m 197 ft but none would meet the wider UIAA prominence threshold of 600 m 1 969 ft the lowest prominence of the existing 14 eight thousanders is Lhotse at 610 metres 2 001 ft 115 116 Critics noted that of the six proposed only Broad Peak Central with a prominence of 181 metres 594 ft would even meet the 150 metres 492 ft prominence threshold to be a British Isles Marilyn 115 The appeal noted the UIAA s 1994 reclassification of Alpine four thousander peaks used a prominence threshold of 30 m 98 ft g amongst other criteria the logic being that if 30 m 98 ft worked for 4 000 m 13 123 ft summits then 60 m 197 ft is proportional for 8 000 m 26 247 ft summits 117 As of November 2018 update there has been no conclusion by the UIAA and the proposals appear to have been set aside Proposed to the UIAA in 2012 for reclassification as standalone eight thousanders 114 List of the subsidiary peaks of the 14 eight thousanders 118 Proposed new eight thousander Height m Prominence m Dominance Prom Height 119 Dominance classification 119 Broad Peak Central 8011 181 2 26 B2Kangchenjunga W Peak Yalung Kang 8505 135 1 59 C1Kangchenjunga S Peak 8476 116 1 37 C2Kangchenjunga C Peak 8473 63 0 74 C2Lhotse C Peak I Lhotse Middle 8410 65 0 77 C2Lhotse Shar 8382 72 0 86 C2K 2 SW Peak 8580 30 0 35 D1Lhotse C Peak II 8372 37 0 44 D1Everest W Peak 8296 30 0 36 D1Yalung Kang Shoulder 8200 40 0 49 D1Kangchenjunga SE Peak 8150 30 0 37 D1K 2 P 8134 SW Ridge 8134 35 0 43 D1Annapurna C Peak 8013 49 0 61 D1Nanga Parbat S Peak 8042 30 0 37 D1Annapurna E Peak 7986 65 0 81 C2Shisha Pangma C Peak 8008 30 0 37 D1Everest NE Shoulder 8423 19 0 23 D2Everest NE Pinnacle III 8383 13 0 16 D2Lhotse N Pinnacle III 8327 10 0 12 D2Lhotse N Pinnacle II 8307 12 0 14 D2Lhotse N Pinnacle I 8290 10 0 12 D2Everest NE Pinnacle II 8282 25 0 30 D2Gallery Edit No 1 Mount Everest No 2 K2 No 3 Kangchenjunga No 4 Lhotse No 5 Makalu No 6 Cho Oyu No 7 Dhaulagiri No 8 Manaslu No 9 Nanga Parbat No 10 Annapurna No 11 Gasherbrum I No 12 Broad Peak No 13 Gasherbrum II No 14 ShishapangmaSee also Edit Mountains portalExplorers Grand Slam the North Pole the South Pole and the Seven Summits List of deaths on eight thousanders List of Mount Everest summiters by number of times to the summit List of ski descents of eight thousanders Three Poles Challenge the North Pole the South Pole and Mount Everest Volcanic Seven Summits the highest volcanos on each continent Fourteener peak with at least 14 000 ft elevationNotes Edit a b As recorded by Eberhard Jurgalski and being any death climber or other above Base Camp 25 Per The Himalayan Database HDB tables the Climber or Member Death Rate is the ratio of deaths above base camp of all climbers who were hoping to summit and who went above base camp for 1950 to 2009 and is closer to a true probability of death the data is only for Nepalese Himalaya Summary tables from the HDB report for all mountains above 8 000 metres imply that the death rate for the period 1990 to 2009 e g modern expeditions is roughly half that of the combined 1950 to 2009 period 28 As recorded by Eberhard Jurgalski This should not be mistaken as being a death rate it does not imply a probability of death for a climber attempting to climb an eight thousander as it includes all deaths from all activities undertaken above base camp e g training or reconnaissance trips camp stocking activities by porters who will not be summiting the mountain rescue attempts etc It therefore compares deaths from the larger group of people who were and were not making a summit attempt with the smaller group who were making a summit attempt While it is not a probability the statistic does reflect the ratio of people who died above base camp for each climber who summited a b c d e Data is not available for the Pakistani Himalayas Nirmal Purja climbed all fourteen 8 000m peaks between April 2019 and October 2019 but climbed his first Dhaulagiri in 2014 The UIAA main list also includes summits that have a prominence far lower than 30 metres References Edit a b c d e f g h Branch John 21 May 2021 What is a summit Only 44 people have reached the summit of all 14 of the world s 8 000 meter peaks according to the people who chronicle such things New York Times Retrieved 10 December 2021 a b c d e Franz Derek 20 July 2022 Researchers challenge historical records for 8000 meter peaks Alpinist Retrieved 3 August 2022 Fast Facts About Nanga Parbat climbing about com Retrieved 29 May 2015 Herzog Maurice 1951 Annapurna First Conquest of an 8000 meter Peak Translated from the French by Nea Morin and Janet Adam Smith New York E P Dutton amp Co p 257 Yi Wyn Yen 14 November 2004 Finding China Sports Illustrated Retrieved 5 August 2022 Zawada Andrzej 1984 Translated by Doubrawa Cochlin Ingeborga Cochlin Peter Mount Everest The First Winter Ascent PDF The Alpine Journal 50 59 a b c d e Hobley Nicholas 24 October 2019 Remembering Jerzy Kukuczka the legendary Polish mountaineer PlanetMountain Retrieved 10 December 2021 a b Farmer Ben 16 January 2021 Former Gurkha Nirmal Purja among Nepalese climbers to complete first winter ascent of deadly K2 The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 16 January 2021 Rossi Marcello 13 December 2021 It s a Suffering Game Simone Moro and the Fine Art of Climbing 8 000m Peaks in Winter Climbing Retrieved 4 August 2022 PEAKBAGGER World 7200 meter Peaks Ranked Peaks have 500 meters of Clean Prominence Stefanello Vinicio 29 April 2011 Erhard Loretan good bye to a great alpinist PlanetMountain Retrieved 4 August 2022 Oh Eun Sun report final Edurne Pasaban takes the throne ExplorersWeb 10 December 2010 Archived from the original on 16 April 2016 Retrieved 4 January 2014 Austrian woman claims Himalayas climbing record BBC News 23 August 2011 Retrieved 24 August 2011 Austrian is first woman to scale 14 peaks without oxygen AsiaOne 30 August 2011 Retrieved 4 January 2014 Italians become first couple to scale all eight thousanders ansa it 11 May 2017 Retrieved 2 February 2023 a b Stefanello Vinicio 11 May 2017 Nives Meroi and Romano Benet summit Annapurna their 14th 8000er PlanetMountain Retrieved 5 August 2022 Alpinismo il record di Meroi Benet e italiana la prima coppia su tutti gli Ottomila 11 May 2017 Most climbs over 8 000 metres Guinness Book of Records 7 May 2022 Retrieved 5 August 2022 Atwal Sanj 3 December 2021 14 Peaks All the records Nims Purja broke in new Netflix documentary Guinness World Records Retrieved 5 December 2021 Nirmal Purja Ex soldier climbs 14 highest mountains in six months BBC News 29 October 2019 Retrieved 24 December 2019 A Nepali mountaineer and former British Marine has climbed the world s tallest 14 peaks in six months beating an earlier record of almost eight years a b Freddie Wilkinson Nepal climber makes history speed climbing world s tallest peaks National Geographic Retrieved 24 December 2019 On October 29th Nirmal Purja Magar announced via Instagram that he had summited China s Shishapangma This marked the fourteenth 8 000 meter peak he had climbed in seven months and the completion of an extraordinary project to speed climb the world s tallest mountains in rapid succession Sharma Gopal 21 July 2022 Nepali Sherpa sets climbing record on Pakistan mountain Reuters Retrieved 5 August 2022 World record Sanu Sherpa has climbed all 14 eight thousanders twice LACrux 28 July 2022 Retrieved 5 August 2022 a b Armstrong Martin 10 December 2021 Deadly Peaks Statista Retrieved 13 December 2021 a b c d e Eberhard Jurgalski in German Fatalities tables 8000ers com Retrieved 23 November 2018 Included are only fatalities from at or above BC or caused from there Fatalities on approach or return marches are not listed a b c Whitman Mark 22 December 2020 Eight Thousanders The Complete 8000ers Guide MountainIQ Retrieved 13 December 2021 Deadliest mountain to climb Guinness Book of World Records 2019 Retrieved 13 December 2021 a b c d e f g Elizabeth Hawley Richard Sailsbury 2011 The Himalaya by the Numbers A Statistical Analysis of Mountaineering in the Nepal Himalaya PDF p 129 Table D 3 Deaths for peaks with more than 750 members above base camp from 1950 2009 a b c d Eberhard Jurgalski in German General Info 8000ers com Retrieved 21 February 2014 a b DAILY CHART Stairway to heaven how deadly are the world s highest mountains The Economist 29 March 2013 For every three thrill seekers that make it safely up and down Annapurna I one dies trying according to data from Eberhard Jurgalski of website 8000ers com collected in his forthcoming book On Top of the World The New Millennium co authored by Richard Sale Himalayan Death Tolls The Washington Post 24 April 2014 a b PeakBagger World 8000 metre Peaks Mount Everest is two feet taller China and Nepal announce National Geographic Retrieved 15 September 2021 K2 lies in Pakistan near the northern border with China BBC News 26 July 2014 a b All Nepali winter first on K2 Nepali Times 16 January 2021 Retrieved 10 February 2022 a b Naresh Koirala 16 January 2022 A matter of pride The Kathmandu Times Retrieved 10 February 2022 a b Tom Robbins 1 January 2022 Life lessons from mountaineer Nirmal Purja of Netflix s 14 Peaks fame CNA Luxury Retrieved 10 February 2022 35 36 37 Harding Luke 13 July 2000 Climbers banned from sacred peak the Guardian Retrieved 29 March 2018 Elizabeth Hawley Richard Salisbury 2018 The Himalayan Database The Expedition Archives of Elizabeth Hawley The Himalayan Database a b If a mountaineer wants worldwide recognition that they have reached the summit of some of the most formidable mountains in the world they will need to get the approval of Elizabeth Hawley Elizabeth Hawley unrivalled Himalayan record keeper BBC News 29 August 2010 a b Elizabeth Hawley Who Chronicled Everest Treks Dies at 94 New York Times 26 January 2018 High Altitude Mountaineering statistics AdventureStats com 2018 a b c d e Gildea Damien June 2021 THE 8000 ER MESS American Alpine Journal 62 94 Retrieved 10 December 2021 Climbers who have ascended to the summits of all of the world s 14 mountains over 8000 metres 8000ers com Eberhard Jurgalski 2018 Eberhard Jurgalski in German 26 May 2012 Climbers First 14 8000ers com Retrieved 21 February 2014 Carlos Carsolio required emergency oxygen on his descent from Makalu in 1988 EverestNews2004 com News age calculated in 2004 Hong Gil Um was 44 Mr Um Hong Gil has bagged his 15th 8000 meter peak Archived from the original on 21 June 2009 Retrieved 30 November 2008 Kukuxumusu Spanish News Alberto Inurrategi achieves his fourteenth eight thousand meters Archived from the original on 21 June 2009 Retrieved 30 November 2008 Best of ExplorersWeb 2005 Awards Ed Viesturs and Christian Kuntner Mounteverest net Archived from the original on 22 December 2008 Retrieved 30 November 2008 the American climber became one of only five men in the world to accomplish the quest entirely without supplementary oxygen Mounteverest net The wolf is back Gnaro bags Baruntse Archived from the original on 28 October 2008 Retrieved 30 November 2008 Last year Silvio Gnaro Mondinelli broke the haunted 13 when he summited the last peak on his list of 14 8000ers becoming only the 6th mountaineer in the world to have bagged them all without supplementary oxygen The day after Silvio Mondinelli Broad Peak and all 14 8000m summits PlanetMountain com Retrieved 30 November 2008 13 07 interview with Silvio Mondinelli after the summit of his 14th 8000m peak without supplementary oxygen The 14th knight Ecuadorian Ivan Vallejo is ready to continue Mounteverest net Archived from the original on 11 May 2008 Retrieved 30 November 2008 Implied in text Following Italian Silvio Gnaro Mondinelli last year and American Ed Viesturs in 2005 Ivan also became only the seventh mountaineer in the world to have done them all without supplementary oxygen The 14th knight Ecuadorian Ivan Vallejo is ready to continue Mounteverest net Archived from the original on 11 May 2008 Retrieved 30 November 2008 Ivan also became only the seventh mountaineer in the world to have done them all without supplementary oxygen Denis Urubko Cho Oyu and all 14 8000m peaks PlanetMountain com Retrieved 18 May 2009 Ralf Dujmovits Ralf dujmovits de Archived from the original on 15 July 2010 Retrieved 14 April 2010 GI summits Veikka Gustafsson completes the 14x8000ers list Explorersweb com Retrieved 26 July 2022 Best of ExplorersWeb 2009 Awards the 14x8000ers Explorersweb com Retrieved 26 July 2022 Summit 8000 Andrew Lock s quest to climb all fourteen of the highest mountains in the world Andrew lock com Retrieved 14 April 2010 Australia s Most Accomplished Mountaineer Andrew Lock 2 October 2009 Archived from the original on 7 July 2013 Retrieved 14 April 2010 Piotr Pustelnik summits Annapurna bags the 14x8000ers Explorersweb com Archived from the original on 10 March 2016 Retrieved 21 February 2014 Shisha Pangma Edurne Pasaban summits completes the 14x800ers Explorersweb com Archived from the original on 18 April 2016 Retrieved 21 February 2014 Abele Blanc summits Annapurna and all 8000ers Planetmountain com Retrieved 21 February 2014 a b c d e f g h i Climbers First 14 updated table on 8000ers com 8000ers com Retrieved 21 February 2014 Everest Mount Everest by climbers news Mounteverest net 18 May 2005 Archived from the original on 8 July 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2014 Mario Panzeri sono in cima E finalmente sono 14 ottomila Montagna tv Archived from the original on 2 November 2013 Retrieved 21 February 2014 a b 日本人初の快挙 8000m峰14座登頂 竹内洋岳 Nikkei com Retrieved 21 February 2014 Climbers First 14 8000ers com 13 August 2014 Retrieved 13 August 2014 a b c d Nives Meroi and Romano Benet climbed all the Eight thousanders together it wasn t revealed if one of them climbed the last peak a few moments before the other thus they share the same position a b Nives Meroi and Romano Benet summit Annapurna their 14th 8000er PlanetMountain com Retrieved 11 May 2017 a b Nives Meroi in Roman Benet preplezala 14 osemtisocakov Sta si in Slovenian Retrieved 11 May 2017 Slovenec s 15 osemtisocaka Delo si in Slovenian Retrieved 11 May 2017 Pokoril vsetky osemtisicovky skrsi rtvs sk 16 May 2017 Retrieved 17 May 2017 E vetta per Peter Hamor Con il Dhaulagiri sono 14 anche per lui in Italian www montagna tv 15 May 2017 Retrieved 28 December 2021 Tom Nicholson 4 June 1998 HZDS flag flies from Everest summit spectator sme sk Retrieved 28 December 2021 قیچی ساز حماسه ساز شد کوهنورد تبریزی به هشت هزاری ها پیوست yjc 19 May 2017 Retrieved 19 May 2017 Ferran Latorre completa los catorce ochomiles en el Everest in Spanish desnivel com 27 May 2017 Archived from the original on 5 July 2017 Retrieved 27 May 2017 Cadiach camino del campo 3 tras coronar el Broad Peak in Spanish La Vanguardia 27 July 2017 Retrieved 27 July 2017 김미곤 히말라야 14봉 등정 보고회 열려 in Korean Mountain Journal 27 July 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2019 South Korean Climbs Nanga Parbat Completes 8 000ers Gripped 12 July 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Sanu Sherpa becomes third Nepali to complete 14 peaks as Sergi Mingote scales 7 mountains in 444 days The Himalayan Times 3 October 2019 Retrieved 11 November 2019 Dream Wanderlust 24 May 2019 Nirmal Purja summits 5th eight thousander in 12 days ends 1st phase of Project Possible Dreamwanderlust com com Retrieved 26 May 2019 Reflections While Waiting for News from Shishapangma Explorersweb com 29 October 2019 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Nepalese Climber Summits World s 14 Highest Peaks in 6 Months Smashing Record NPR Munir Ahmed 20 July 2021 South Korean missing after fall while scaling Pakistani peak Times Union Archived from the original on 20 July 2021 Retrieved 20 July 2021 Fingerless Korean goes missing after achieving the feat of climbing all 14 Himalayan peaks The Korea Times 20 July 2021 Retrieved 20 July 2021 Stefan Nestler 10 July 2019 Kim Hong bin Without fingers on 13 eight thousanders Adventure Mountain Retrieved 20 July 2021 Nima Gyalzen Sherpa becomes the 6th Nepali in the 14 Peaks club everestchronicle com 11 August 2022 Archived from the original on 11 August 2022 Retrieved 18 August 2022 Nima Gyalzen completes 14 peaks as Grace Tseng Kristin Harila scale G I thehimalayantimes com 11 August 2022 Retrieved 18 August 2022 Online T H T 26 April 2023 Nepal records 82 COVID 19 cases on Wednesday The Himalayan Times Retrieved 4 May 2023 Benavides Angela 26 April 2023 Dong Hong Juan Climbs Shishapangma May Be the First Woman to Summit all 14 8 000 ers Explorersweb Explorersweb Retrieved 4 May 2023 Online T H T 3 May 2023 Kristin Harila completes 14 peaks as she scales Cho Oyu The Himalayan Times Retrieved 3 May 2023 News www 8000ers com Retrieved 3 May 2023 Elizabeth Hawley 2014 Seasonal Stories for the Nepalese Himalaya 1985 2014 PDF The Himalayan Database p 274 But a South Korean climber who followed in their footprints on the crusted snow three days later in 1997 in clearer weather did not consider that they actually gained the top While Sergio Martini and Fausto De Stefani indicated they were perhaps only a few meters below it Park Young Seok claimed that their footprints stopped well before the top perhaps 30 meters below a small fore summit and 150 vertical meters below the highest summit Now in 2000 Sergio Martini was back again and this time he definitely summited Lhotse AdventureStats net Official records Climbers that have summited 10 to 13 of the 14 Main 8000ers Retrieved 30 November 2008 Elizabeth Hawley 2014 Seasonal Stories for the Nepalese Himalaya 1985 2014 PDF The Himalayan Database p 347 But his claim to have now climbed all 8000ers is open to question In April 1990 he and others reached the summit plateau of Cho Oyu It was misty so they could not see well nine years later Hinkes said he had wandered around for a while in the summit area but could see very little and eventually descended to join the others one of whom said they had not reached the top Vladislav Terz www russianclimb com Retrieved 28 April 2016 AdventureStats by Explorersweb www adventurestats com Retrieved 28 April 2016 Russianclimb com Mountaineering World of Russia amp CIS Vladislav Terzyul List of ascents Retrieved 6 October 2009 Sad results on Makalu and Unanswered Questions 1 missing climber and 1 passed away on Makalu Everestnews2004 com Archived from the original on 12 May 2012 Retrieved 21 February 2014 Everest K2 News ExplorersWeb More dark clouds mounting on Anna summit push Miss Oh s Kanchen summit disputed after renewed accusations Explorersweb com 26 April 2010 Archived from the original on 15 March 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2014 a b New doubts over Korean Oh Eun Sun s climbing record Hawley to investigate BBC News 27 August 2010 What would appear to be the most serious blow to Miss Oh on 26 August this year the Korean Alpine Federation the nation s largest climbing association concluded that Miss Oh had not reached the top of Kangchenjunga Seasonal Stories for the Nepalese Himalaya 1985 2014 PDF Elizabeth Hawley 2014 p 394 Desnivel Carlos Pauner consigue la cima del Everest Desnivel com Archived from the original on 23 October 2015 Retrieved 21 January 2014 Carlos Pauner is not sure if they hit the top of the Shisha Pangma 8 027 lainformacion com 18 February 2016 CCTV 罗静等23名中国登山者登顶希夏邦马峰 CCTV 29 September 2018 Retrieved 5 June 2019 The Himalayan Times Four Chinese climbers complete all 14 peaks above 8 000m this autumn The Himalayan Times 29 September 2018 Retrieved 5 June 2019 Luo Jing no alcanzo la cima principal del Shisha Pangma Luo Jing did not reach the main peak of the Shishapangma in Spanish Desnivel com 4 October 2018 Retrieved 25 September 2020 I have summited Cho Oyu 4 times and will be heading for my fifth this coming season Each time I have watched the Koreans and Japanese go only to where they can see Everest not the summit because they know this is what will be asked Cho Oyu summit Where is it exactly Explorersweb com September 2017 Many people who climb Cho Oyu in Tibet stop at a set of prayer flags with views of Everest and believe they ve reached the top unaware they still have to walk for 15 minutes across the summit plateau until they can see the Gokyo Lakes in Nepal When is a summit not a summit Mark Horrell 12 November 2014 Asia Tibet Cho Oyu and Shisha Pangma Central West Summit American Alpine Journal 1991 Keeper of the Mountains The Elizabeth Hawley Story Rocky Mountain Books 5 October 2012 pp 185 195 ISBN 978 1927330159 Richard Gray 23 August 2013 The new peaks opened as alternatives to Mount Everest The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Nepal a b c Navin Singh Khadka 18 October 2013 Nepal mountain peak expansion bid stalls BBC News a b Do we really need more 8000m peaks Mark Horrell 23 October 2013 The most prominent one Broad Peak Central is just 196m high and the least prominent Lhotse Middle is a meagre 60m To put this in context the highest mountain in Malta is 253m while the Eiffel Tower stands a whopping 300m A funny name for a mountain Mark Horrell 4 June 2014 UIAA Mountain Classification 4 000ERS OF THE ALPS UIAA March 1994 Topographic criterium for each summit the level difference between it and the highest adjacent pass or notch should be at least 30 m 98 ft calculated as average of the summits at the limit of acceptability An additional criterium can be the horizontal distance between a summit and the base of another adjacent 4000er Eberhard Jurgalski in German Subsidiary Peaks 8000ers com Retrieved 23 November 2018 There are several different subsidiary peaks Here are the geographical facts from the one relative independent Main Peak EU category B over the important subsidiary peaks C to the major notable points D1 Especially the last category is just guessed by contours or from photographs a b Eberhard Jurgalski in German Dominance 8000ers com Retrieved 23 November 2018 Accordingly the author introduced altitude classes AC and a proportional prominence which he named orometrical dominance D D is calculated easily but fittingly P Alt x 100 Thus it indicates the percentage of independence for every elevation no matter what the altitude prominence or mountain type it is From a scientific point of view altitude could be seen as the thesis prominence as the antithesis whereas dominance would be the synthesis External links Edit8000ers com a site dedicated to statistics on 8000m peaks and climbs PeakBagger com World 8000 meter Peaks a database of global peaks The Himalayan Database statistics on Nepalese Himalayan but not Pakistan Himalaya climbs from 1905 to 2018 Graphical Interface for The Himalayan Database AdventureStats com High Altitude Mountaineering a site dedicated to recording adventure statistics NASA Earth Observatory The Eight Thousanders Eight Thousanders Tracking Expeditons On Line from Alpinismonline Magazine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eight thousander amp oldid 1153107314, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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