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Mount Kenya

Mount Kenya (Kikuyu: Kĩrĩnyaga, Kamba, Ki Nyaa) is the highest mountain in Kenya and the second-highest in Africa, after Kilimanjaro.[5] The highest peaks of the mountain are Batian (5,199 metres or 17,057 feet), Nelion (5,188 m or 17,021 ft) and Point Lenana (4,985 m or 16,355 ft). Mount Kenya is located in the former Eastern and Central provinces of Kenya; its peak is now the intersection of Meru, Embu, Kirinyaga, Nyeri and Tharaka Nithi counties, about 16.5 kilometres (10.3 miles) south of the equator, around 150 km (90 mi) north-northeast of the capital Nairobi.[6][5] Mount Kenya is the source of the name of the Republic of Kenya.

Mount Kenya
Highest point
Elevation5,199 m (17,057 ft)[1]
Prominence3,825 m (12,549 ft)[1]
Ranked 32nd
Isolation323 km (201 mi) 
ListingSeven Second Summits
Country high point
Ultra
Coordinates0°9′03″S 37°18′27″E / 0.15083°S 37.30750°E / -0.15083; 37.30750Coordinates: 0°9′03″S 37°18′27″E / 0.15083°S 37.30750°E / -0.15083; 37.30750[1]
Naming
Native name
Geography
Mount Kenya
Topo mapMount Kenya by Wielochowski and Savage[2][3]
Geology
Mountain typeStratovolcano (extinct)
Last eruption2.6–3.1 MYA
Climbing
First ascent13 September 1899 by Mackinder, Ollier, and Brocherel, although the peoples of Kenya believed God (Ngai in Gikuyu) resided on this mountain and regularly ascended the peaks to perform spiritual rites.[4]
Easiest routeRock climb

Mount Kenya is a volcano created approximately 3 million years after the opening of the East African Rift.[7] Before glaciation, it was 7,000 m (23,000 ft) high. It was covered by an ice cap for thousands of years. This has resulted in very eroded slopes and numerous valleys radiating from the peak.[8][9] There are currently 11 small glaciers, which are shrinking rapidly, and may disappear by 2050.[10] The forested slopes are an important source of water for much of Kenya.[11]

There are several vegetation bands from the base to the peak.[12] The lower slopes are covered by different types of forest. Many alpine species are endemic to Mount Kenya, such as the giant lobelias and senecios and a local subspecies of rock hyrax.[13] An area of 715 km2 (276 sq mi) around the centre of the mountain was designated a National Park and listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997.[14] The park receives over 16,000 visitors per year.[15][11]

Mount Kenya National Park

 
Mount Kenya, as seen from a SkySat satellite

Mount Kenya National Park, established in 1949, protects the region surrounding the mountain. Currently, the national park is within the forest reserve which encircles it.[16] In April 1978 the area was designated a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve.[17] The national park and the forest reserve, combined, became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997.[14]

The Government of Kenya had four reasons for creating a national park on and around Mount Kenya. These were the importance of tourism for the local and national economies, preserving an area of great scenic beauty, conserving the biodiversity within the park, and preserving the water catchment for the surrounding area.[11]

Kenya's government has announced a project to discourage animals from straying into small holdings surrounding the Park and devastating crops. The project will see the Park enclosed by an electric fence with five electrified strands. Kenya's Rhino Ark Trust, a non-profit organization, has been putting up fences in key areas around the country. As of 2021, 250 kilometres (160 miles) out of a planned 450 kilometres (280 miles) have been constructed in the Mt. Kenya area.[18] The fence discharges an electric shock, but is not dangerous to humans or animals.[19]

Local culture

 
Mount Kenya is important to all the ethnic communities living around it.

The main ethnic groups living around Mount Kenya are Kikuyu, Ameru, Embu and Maasai. The first three are closely related. They all see the mountain as an important aspect of their cultures. All these cultures arrived in the Mount Kenya area in the last several hundred years.

Kikuyu

 
Several ethnic groups that live around Mount Kenya believe the mountain to be sacred. They used to build their houses facing the mountain, with the doors on the side nearest to it.

The Kikuyu live on the southern and western sides of the mountain. They are agriculturalists, and make use of the highly fertile volcanic soil on the lower slopes. They believe that God, Ngai or Mwene Nyaga, lived on Mount Kenya when he came down from the sky.[4] They believe that the mountain is Ngai's throne on earth. It is the place where Gĩkũyũ, the father of the tribe, used to meet with God. Thus according to the Kikuyu records, Gĩkũyũ is the first person on Earth to ascend the mountain. 'Mwene Nyaga' in the Kikuyu language can also translate as the "Owner of the Ostriches" or "Owner of the white patches (of snow)" where 'Mwene' translates to 'owner', and 'Nyaga' to Ostriches or white patches. The snow (in Kikuyu: Ira) caps of the mountain symbolically represent a crown on God's habitation. Kikuyu used to build their houses with doors facing the mountain.[20] The Kikuyu name for Mount Kenya is Kirima Kĩrĩ Nyaga (Mt.Kirinyaga), which literally translates to the mountain that has the "Nyaga" – Ostriches. The mountain, therefore, is locally accepted as 'God's Resting Place' or 'Where God Lives'.[citation needed]

The Kikuyu name for Mt. Kenya is Kĩrĩnyaga which literally means ‘the one with the ostrich’. The ostrich has black or brownish–grey feathers with patches of white. The Kikuyu attributed an ostrich's likeness to an object that was dark-coloured with white patches. The name Kĩrĩnyaga therefore figuratively means ‘the one with white patches’, referring to the glaciers among the peaks of the mountain.

Translated to the Kamba language, kĩrĩnyaga, would be ki nyaa. This is the name that Ludwig Kraph was given when he sighted the mountain from Kitui (in Kamba country). He recorded it as Kenya. It became the name of not only the mountain but also the country.[21]

Embu

The Embu people live to the south-east of Mount Kenya,[13] and believe that the mountain is God's home (the Embu word for God is Ngai or Mwene Njeru). The mountain is sacred, and they build their houses with the doors facing toward it.[20] The Embu people are closely related to the Ameru and Mbeere people.[22] The Mbeere and Akamba are the settlers of the southeast side of the mountain.[23]

Ameru

The Ameru occupy the east, north, and north-western slopes of the mountain. They are generally agricultural and also keep livestock and occupy what is among the most fertile land in Kenya. The Meru god Murungu was from the skies. Their name for Mt. Kenya is Kirimara, which means 'mountain with white features'.[24]

Maasai

 
Mount Kenya lies in the Kenyan highlands, 150 km (90 mi) north-northeast of Nairobi, just northeast of Nyeri.[5]

The Maasai are semi-nomadic people, who use the land to the north of the mountain to graze their cattle.[25] They believe that their ancestors came down from the mountain at the beginning of time.[20] The Maasai name for Mount Kenya is Ol Donyo Keri, which means 'mountain of stripes', referring to the dark shades as observed from the surrounding plains.[26] At least one Maasai prayer refers to Mount Kenya:

God bless our children, let them be like the olive tree of Morintat, let them grow and expand, let them be like Ngong Hills like Mt. Kenya, like Mt. Kilimanjaro and multiply in number.

— Collected by Francis Sakuda of Oloshoibor Peace Museum[26]

Geology

 
Mount Kenya was a stratovolcano and probably looked similar to Mt. Fuji[citation needed] (shown above). The lower slopes are still this shape, which is how the previous height is estimated.
 
The central peaks of Mount Kenya are volcanic plugs that have resisted glacial erosion.[9] (Left to right: Point Thompson (4955m), Batian (5199m) and Nelion (5188m))

Mount Kenya is a stratovolcano that was active in the Plio-Pleistocene. The original crater was probably over 6,000 m (19,700 ft) high; higher than Kilimanjaro. Since it became extinct there have been two major periods of glaciation, which are shown by two main rings of moraines below the glaciers. The lowest moraine is found at around 3,300 m (10,800 ft).[27] Today the glaciers reach no lower than 4,650 m (15,260 ft).[3] After studying the moraines, Gregory put forward the theory that at one time the whole summit of the mountain was covered with an ice cap, and it was this that eroded the peaks to how they are today.[8]

The lower slopes of the mountain have never been glaciated. They are now mainly cultivated and forested. They are distinguished by steep-sided V-shaped valleys with many tributaries. Higher up the mountain, in the area that is now moorland, the valleys become U-shaped and shallower with flatter bottoms. These were created by glaciation.[27]

When Mount Kenya was active there was some satellite activity. The northeastern side of the mountain has many old volcanic plugs and craters. The largest of these, Ithanguni, even had its own ice cap when the main peaks were covered in ice. This can be seen by the smoothed summit of the peak. Circular hills with steep sides are also frequent in this area, which are probably the remains of small plugged vents. However, as the remaining mountain is roughly symmetrical, most of the activity must have occurred at the central plug.[27]

The rocks that form Mount Kenya are mainly basalts, rhomb porphyrites, phonolites, kenytes and trachytes.[27] Kenyte was first reported by Gregory in 1900 following his study of the geology of Mount Kenya.[28]

The geology of the Mount Kenya area was first described scientifically by Joseph Thomson in 1883. He saw the mountain from the nearby Laikipia Plateau and wrote that it was an extinct volcano with the plug exposed.[29] However, as he had only seen the mountain from a distance his description was not widely believed in Europe, particularly after 1887 when Teleki and von Höhnel ascended the mountain and described what they considered to be the crater.[30] In 1893 Gregory's expedition reached the Lewis Glacier at 5,000 m (16,400 ft). He confirmed that the volcano was extinct and that there were glaciers present.[28][30] The first thorough survey by Europeans was not undertaken until 1966.[27]

Peaks

 
The main peaks and glaciers of Mount Kenya are near the centre of the mountain.

The peaks of Mount Kenya are almost all of volcanic origin. The majority of the peaks are located near the centre of the mountain. These peaks have an Alpine appearance due to their craggy nature. Typically of Alpine terrain, the highest peaks and gendarmes occur at the intersection of ridges.[9] The central peaks only have a few mosses, lichens, and small alpine plants growing in rock crevices.[13] Further away from the central peaks, the volcanic plugs are covered in volcanic ash and soils.[31] The vegetation growing on these peaks is typical for their vegetation band.

The highest peaks are Batian (5,199 m or 17,057 ft), Nelion (5,188 m or 17,021 ft) and Pt Lenana (4,985 m or 16,355 ft). Batian and Nelion are within 250 m (270 yd) of each other, separated by the Gate of the Mists gap of 5,144 m (16,877 ft).[3][32] Coryndon Peak (4,960 m or 16,273 ft) is the next-highest, but unlike the previous peaks it does not form a part of the central plug.[9]

Other peaks around the central plug include Pt Piggot (4,957 m or 16,263 ft), Pt Dutton (4,885 m or 16,027 ft), Pt John (4,883 m or 16,020 ft), Pt John Minor (4,875 m or 15,994 ft), Krapf Rognon (4,800 m or 15,748 ft), Pt Peter (4,757 m or 15,607 ft), Pt Slade (4,750 m or 15,584 ft) and Midget Peak (4,700 m or 15,420 ft). All of these have a steep pyramidal form.[3][9]

Significant craggy outlying peaks include Terere (4,714 m or 15,466 ft) and Sendeyo (4,704 m or 15,433 ft) which form a pair of twin peaks to the north of the main plug. Together, they form a large parasitic plug. Other notable peaks include The Hat (4,639 m or 15,220 ft), Delamere Peak, Macmillan Peak and Rotundu.[3]

Glaciers

 
The Lewis Glacier is the largest on Mount Kenya

The glaciers on Mount Kenya are retreating rapidly. The Mountain Club of Kenya in Nairobi has photographs showing the mountain at the time of the first recorded ascent in 1899, and again more recently; the retreat of the glaciers is very evident.[34][35] Descriptions of ascents of several of the peaks advise the use of crampons, but this is true only in some cases and at higher elevations. Every year there is less new snow accumulating in winter than melting in summer, even on the Lewis Glacier (the largest of them) in winter, so there is no formation of new ice. It is predicted to be less than 30 years before there will no longer be ice on Mount Kenya.[20] Glacial retreat and disappearance can be caused by changes in temperature trends, or by a change in precipitation trends.[36]

The glacier names are (clockwise from the north):

  • Northey, Krapf, Gregory, Lewis, Diamond, Darwin, Forel, Heim, Tyndall, Cesar, Josef.
 
Frost heaving causes patterned solifluction lobes below Mugi Hill.

The total area covered by glaciers on the mountain was recorded as about 0.7 km2 (14 sq mi) in the 1980s,[37] far less than that recorded by the first observations, made in the 1890s.

Periglacial landforms

Although Mount Kenya is on the equator the freezing nightly temperatures result in periglacial landforms. There is permafrost a few centimetres (inches) below the surface. Patterned ground is present at 3,400 m (11,155 ft) to the west of Mugi Hill.[3][9] These mounds grow because the repeated freezing and thawing of the ground draws in more water. There are blockfields present around 4,000 m (13,123 ft) where the ground has cracked to form hexagons. Solifluction occurs when the night temperatures freeze the soil before it thaws again in the morning. This daily expansion and contraction of the soil prevent the establishment of vegetation.[33]

Rivers

 
Runoff from Mount Kenya provides water for over 2 million people.[11]

Mount Kenya is the main water catchment area for two large rivers in Kenya; the Tana, the largest river in Kenya, and the Ewaso Nyiro North.[11] The Mount Kenya ecosystem provides water directly for over 2 million people.[11] The rivers on Mount Kenya have been named after the villages on the slopes of the mountain that they flow close to. The Thuchi River is the district boundary between Tharaka Nithi and Embu. Mount Kenya is a major water tower for the Tana river which in 1988 supplied 80% of Kenya's electricity using a series of seven hydroelectric power stations and dams.[38]

The density of streams is very high, especially on the lower slopes which have never been glaciated. The ice cap which used to cover the mountain during the Pliocene eroded large U-shaped valleys which tend to only have one large stream.[9] Where the original shape of the shield volcano is still preserved, there have been millions of years for streams to erode the hillside. This area is therefore characterised by frequent deep fluvial V-shaped valleys.[39] The gradual transition from glaciated to the fluvial valley can be clearly observed.[40]

Rivers that start on Mount Kenya are the tributaries of two large Kenyan rivers: the Tana and the Ewaso Ng'iro rivers. A lot of Mount Kenyan rivers flow into the Sagana which itself is a tributary of the Tana, which joins at the Masinga Reservoir. The rivers in the northern part of the mountain, such as the Burguret, Naru Moru, Nanyuki, Likii, and Sirimon flow into the Ewaso Nyiro. The rivers to the southwest, such as the Keringa and Nairobi flow into the Sagana and then into the Tana. The remaining rivers to the south and east, such as the Kathitâ (Largest River in Meru), Mutonga, Nithi, Thuchi, and Nyamindi, flow directly into the Tana.[39][40]

Natural history

Mount Kenya has several altitudinal ecological zones, from the savanna surrounding the mountain to the nival zone by the glaciers. Each zone has a dominant species of vegetation. Many of the species found higher up the mountain are endemic, either to Mount Kenya or East Africa.[13]

There are also differences within the zones, depending on the side of the mountain and the aspect of the slope. The southeast is much wetter than the north,[37] so species more dependent on moisture can grow. Some species, such as the bamboo Yushania alpina, are limited to certain aspects of the mountain because of the amount of moisture.[3]

Zones

 
There are distinct vegetation zones around Mount Kenya which vary according to altitude and aspect.

The climate of Mount Kenya changes considerably with altitude, forming belts of community types.[41] Around the base of the mountain is fertile farmland. The people living around the mountain have cultivated this cool relatively moist area for centuries.[42]

Mount Kenya is surrounded by forests. The vegetation in the forests depend on rainfall, and the species present differ greatly between the northern and southern slopes.[43] As time has passed the trees on the edge of the forest have been logged and the farmland has encroached further up the fertile slopes of the mountain.[41][42]

Above the forest is a belt of Yushania alpina African alpine bamboo. This zone is almost continuous but is restricted to small isolated bunches in the north because of low rainfall. The bamboo is natural,[33] and does not require forest disturbance. Tracks are common through the bamboo. Bamboo suppresses other vegetation, so it is uncommon to find trees or other plants here.[3]

 
The timberline forest is commonly in cloud. The trees are relatively small and covered in lichens and mosses.

Above the bamboo is the timberline forest. The trees here are often smaller than the trees in the forests lower down the mountain.[44] The forest here is more intact because it is less accessible and better protected.

When the trees can no longer grow the vegetation changes into heathland and chaparral, at around 3,000 m (9,800 ft). Heathland is found in the wetter areas, on the west side of Mount Kenya, and is dominated by giant heathers. Chaparral is found in drier areas and grasses are more common.[33] and bushfires still occur.[42]

As the altitude increases the temperature fluctuations become extreme and the air becomes thinner and drier. This region is known as the Afro-alpine zone. The environment here is isolated, with the only similar area nearby being the Aberdares, which are 80 km (50 mi) away.[13] Many of the species here are endemic, with adaptations to the cold and fluctuating temperatures.[45] Typical plants here include giant groundsels (senecios) and giant lobelias.[13]

The region where the glaciers have recently retreated from is nival zone. It is the area that plants have not yet been able to colonise.[13]

Flora

 
Many plants that live on Mount Kenya, like this Senecio keniodendron, have to be specially adapted to the extremes in temperature.

The flora found on Mount Kenya varies with altitude, aspect, and exposure.[46] As the altitude increases, the plants have to be more specialised, with adaptations to strong sunlight with ultraviolet, lower mean temperatures, and freezing night temperatures.[33][44]

Plants in the Afro-alpine zone have overcome these difficulties in several ways.[45] One adaptation is known as the giant rosette, which is exhibited by giant senecio, giant lobelia, and giant thistle (Carduus), which use bud leaves to protect their buds from freezing. Giant rosette senecios form single-aged stands that drive community structure over decades.[47]

Many plant species in the Afro-alpine zone of Mount Kenya are giant versions of lowland (or temperate) relatives. However, nearer the nival zone the plants decrease in size again.[13]

 
Hyrax can cope with a more extreme climate and are found up to the highest elevation.

Fauna

 
Safari ants swarm around the forest in long columns. They are easiest to see when they cross the tracks.

The majority of animals live lower down on the slopes of Mount Kenya. Here there is more vegetation and the climate is less extreme. Various species of monkeys, several antelopes, tree hyrax, porcupines, and some larger animals such as elephants and buffalo all live in the forest.[3] Predators found here include hyenas and leopards, and occasionally lions.[3]

There are fewer mammals found at high altitudes on Mount Kenya.[48] The Mount Kenya hyrax and common duiker can live here, and are important to the ecosystem. Some smaller mammals, such as the groove-toothed rat, can live here by burrowing into the giant senecios and using their thick stem of dead leaves as insulation.[13] The Mount Kenya mole-rat Tachyoryctes rex occurs at high altitudes, living in visible mounds.[49] Leopards are resident in the alpine zone.

Other mammal species are only occasional visitors. Remains of elephants, monkeys, and bongo have been found high in the alpine zone,[48] and other sightings are remembered in names such as Simba Tarn (simba means lion in Swahili).[33]

Several bird species live in the Afro-alpine zone, including sunbirds, alpine chats and starlings and the raptors, augur buzzard, lammergeier and Verreaux's eagle, the latter of which specializes in hunting hyraxes. Birds are important in this ecosystem as pollinators.[46]

Climate

The climate of Mount Kenya has played a critical role in the development of the mountain, influencing the topography and ecology amongst other factors. It has a typical equatorial mountain climate which Hedberg described as winter every night and summer every day.[50] Mount Kenya is home to one of the Global Atmosphere Watch's atmospheric monitoring stations.[51]

Seasons

 
In January the Intertropical Convergence Zone is at its southern extreme over the Indian Ocean. In July it is at its northern extreme over Tibet and Arabia. As it passes over the equator, Mount Kenya experiences a wet season.[52]

The year is divided into two distinct wet seasons and two distinct dry seasons which mirror the wet and dry seasons in the Kenyan lowlands.[53] As Mount Kenya ranges in height from 1,374 to 5,199 m (4,508 to 17,057 ft), the climate varies considerably over the mountain and has different zones of influence. The lower, southeastern slopes are the wettest as the predominant weather system comes from the Indian ocean. This rainfall supports dense montane forests on these slopes. High on the mountain most of the precipitation falls as snow.[54] Combined, these water sources feed 11 glaciers.

The current climate on Mount Kenya is wet, but drier than it has been in the past. The temperatures span a wide range, which diminishes with altitude. In the lower alpine zone temperature usually do not go below 12 °C (54 °F).[55] Snow and rain are common from March to December, but especially in the two wet seasons. The wet seasons combined account for 5/6 of the annual precipitation. The monsoon, which controls the wet and dry seasons, means that most of the year there are south-easterly winds, but during January and February the dominant wind direction is north-easterly.[citation needed]

Mount Kenya, like most locations in the tropics, has two wet seasons and two dry seasons as a result of the monsoon. From mid-March to June the heavy rain season, known as the long rains, brings approximately half of the annual rainfall on the mountain.[42] This is followed by the wetter of the two dry seasons which lasts until September. October to December are the short rains when the mountain receives approximately a third of its rainfall total. Finally from December to mid-March is the drier dry season when the mountain experiences the least rain.[citation needed]

Daily pattern

During the dry season, the mountain almost always follows the same daily weather pattern. Large daily temperature fluctuations occur which led Hedberg to exclaim winter every night and summer every day.[50] There is variation in minimum and maximum temperatures day to day, but the standard deviation of the mean hourly pattern is small.[citation needed]

 
In the dry season, mornings are typically clear and cool, but the mountain is hidden in cloud by mid-day.

A typical day is clear and cool in the morning with low humidity. The mountain is in direct sunlight which causes the temperatures to rise quickly with the warmest temperatures occurring between 0900 and 1200. This corresponds to a maximum in the pressure, usually around 10 A.M. Low on the mountain, between 2,400 and 3,900 m (7,874 and 12,795 ft), clouds begin to form over the western forest zone, due to moist air from Lake Victoria.[38] The anabatic winds caused by warm rising air gradually bring these clouds to the summit region in the afternoon. Around 1500 there is a minimum in sunlight and a maximum in humidity causing the actual and perceived temperature to drop. At 1600 there is a minimum of pressure. This daily cover of clouds protects the glaciers on the southwest of the mountain which would otherwise get direct sun every day, enhancing their melt.[56] The upwelling cloud eventually reaches the dry easterly air streams and dissipates, leading to a clear sky by 5 P.M. There is another maximum temperature associated with this.[citation needed]

Being an equatorial mountain the daylight hours are constant with twelve-hour days. Sunrise is about 0630 with the sun setting at 1830 (both EAT = UTC+3). Over the year there is a one-minute difference between the shortest and longest days.[57] At night, the sky is usually clear with katabatic winds blowing down the valleys. Above the lower alpine zone there is usually frost every night.[55]

History

European documentation

 
Joseph Thomson reached the foothills of Mount Kenya and confirmed Krapf's discovery.

The first European to report seeing Mount Kenya was Dr Johann Ludwig Krapf, a German missionary, from Kitui,[58] a town 160 km (100 mi)[5] away from the mountain. The sighting was made on 3 December 1849,[43] a year after the first sighting of Mount Kilimanjaro by a European.[59]

Krapf was told by the Embu people that lived around the mountain that they did not ascend high enough on the mountain because of the intense cold and the white matter that rolled down the mountains with a loud noise. This led him to infer that glaciers existed on the mountain.[58] It was Krapf who gave the mountain the name "Kenya", but the derivation of this is not known with certainty.[citation needed]

 
Count Sámuel Teleki was the first European to set foot on Mount Kenya. His expedition reached 4,350 m (14,270 ft).

Krapf also noted that the rivers flowing from Mount Kenya, and other mountains in the area, were continuously flowing. This was very different from the other rivers in the area, which swelled up in the wet season and completely dried up after the rainy season had ended. As the streams flowed even in the driest seasons he concluded that there must be a source of water up on the mountain, in the form of glaciers.[58] He believed the mountain to be the source of the White Nile.[60]

In 1851 Krapf returned to Kitui. He travelled 65 kilometres (40 mi) closer to the mountain, but did not see it again. In 1877 Hildebrandt was in the Kitui area and heard stories about the mountain, but also did not see it. Since there were no confirmations to back up Krapf's claim people began to be suspicious.[30]

Eventually, in 1883, Joseph Thomson passed close by the west side of the mountain and confirmed Krapf's claim. He diverted his expedition and reached 1,737 m (5,700 ft) up the slopes of the mountain but had to retreat because of trouble with local people.[29] However, the first European exploration high onto the mountain was achieved in 1887 by Count Sámuel Teleki. He managed to reach 4,350 m (14,270 ft) on the southwestern slopes.[61] On this expedition Teleki mistakenly believed he had found the crater of a volcano.

In 1892, Teleki and von Höhnel returned to the eastern side but were unable to get through the forest.[13]

Finally, in 1893, an expedition managed to ascend Mount Kenya as far as the glaciers. This expedition was traveling from the coast to Lake Baringo in the Rift Valley and was led by Dr. John W Gregory, a British geologist. They managed to ascend the mountain to around 4,730 m (15,520 ft) and spent several hours on the Lewis Glacier with their guide. On his return to Britain, Gregory published papers and a narrative account of his achievements.[33]

George Kolb, a German physician, made expeditions in 1894 and 1896[33] and was the first to reach the moorlands on the east side of the mountain. More exploration occurred after 1899 when the Uganda Railway was completed as far as the future site of Nairobi.[33][62]

Mackinder's expedition

On 28 July 1899,[62] Sir Halford John Mackinder set out from the site of Nairobi on an expedition to Mount Kenya. The members of the expedition consisted of 6 Europeans, 66 Swahilis, 2 Maasai guides, and 96 Kikuyu. The Europeans were Campbell B. Hausberg, second in command and photographer; Douglas Saunders, botanist; C F Camburn, taxidermist; Cesar Ollier, guide; and Josef Brocherel, guide, and porter.[62] The expedition made it as far as the mountain but encountered many difficulties on the way. The country they passed through was full of plague and famine. Many Kikuyu porters tried to desert with women from the villages, and others stole from the villages, which made the chiefs very hostile towards the expedition. When they reached the base camp on 18 August,[62] they could not find any food, suffered two of their party killed by the local people, and eventually had to send Saunders to Naivasha to get help from Captain Gorges, the Government Officer there.[62]

Mackinder pushed on up the mountain and established a camp at 3,142 m (10,310 ft)[62] in the Höhnel Valley. He made his first attempt on the summit on 30 August with Ollier and Brocherel up the southeast face, but they had to retreat when they were within 100 m (330 ft) of the summit of Nelion due to nightfall.

On 5 September, Hausberg, Ollier, and Brocherel made a circuit of the main peaks looking for an easier route to the summit. They could not find one. On 11 September Ollier and Brocherel made an ascent of the Darwin Glacier, but were forced to retreat due to a blizzard.[62]

When Saunders returned from Naivasha with the relief party, Mackinder had another attempt at the summit with Ollier and Brocherel. They traversed the Lewis Glacier and climbed the southeast face of Nelion. They spent the night near the gendarme and traversed the snowfield at the head of the Darwin Glacier at dawn before cutting steps up the Diamond Glacier. They reached the summit of Batian at noon on 13 September 1899 and descended by the same route.[62]

During the expedition, Mackinder ordered for 8 of the 90 African porters, who he had bought from a slave owner to carry his supplies, to be shot.[63]

1900–1930

 
Shipton and Russell made the first ascent of Point John up the south-east gully in 1929

After the first ascent of Mount Kenya, there were fewer expeditions there for a while. The majority of the exploration until after the First World War was by settlers in Kenya, who were not on scientific expeditions. A Church of Scotland mission was set up in Chogoria, and several Scottish missionaries ascended to the peaks, including Rev Dr. J. W. Arthur, G. Dennis and A. R. Barlow. There were other ascents, but none succeeded in summitting Batian or Nelion.[33]

New approach routes were cleared through the forest, which made access to the area of the peak far easier. In 1920, Arthur and Sir Fowell Buxton tried to cut a route in from the south, and other routes came in from Nanyuki in the north, but the most commonly used was the route from the Chogoria mission in the east, built by Ernest Carr. Carr is also credited with building Urumandi and Top Huts.[33]

On 6 January 1929, the first ascent of Nelion was made by Percy Wyn-Harris and Eric Shipton. They climbed the Normal Route, then descended to the Gate of Mists before ascending Batian. On 8 January they reascended, this time with G. A. Sommerfelt, and in December Shipton made another ascent with R. E. G. Russell. They also made the first ascent of Point John. During this year the Mountain Club of East Africa was formed.[33]

At the end of July 1930, Shipton and Bill Tilman made the first traverse of the peaks. They ascended by the West Ridge of Batian, traversed the Gate of Mists to Nelion, and descended the Normal Route. During this trip, Shipton and Tilman made the first ascents of several other peaks, including Point Peter, Point Dutton, Midget Peak, Point Pigott, and either Terere or Sendeyo.[64]

1931 to present day

In the early 1930s, there were several visits to the moorlands around Mount Kenya, with fewer as far as the peaks. Raymond Hook and Humphrey Slade ascended to map the mountain, and stocked several of the streams with trout. By 1938 there had been several more ascents of Nelion. In February, Miss C Carroll and Mtu Muthara became the first woman and African respectively to ascend Nelion, in an expedition with Noel Symington, author of The Night Climbers of Cambridge, and on 5 March Miss Una Cameron became the first woman to ascend Batian.[33]

During the Second World War there was another drop in the ascents of the mountain. The most remarkable ascent during this period was by three Italians who were being held in a British POW camp at the base of the mountain in Nanyuki. They escaped from camp to climb the mountain's third peak, Point Lenana, before "escaping" back into camp. Felice Benuzzi, the team leader, retold his story in the book No Picnic on Mount Kenya (1946).[65][66]

In 1949 the Mountain Club of Kenya split from the Mountain Club of East Africa, and the area above 3,400 m (11,150 ft) was designated a National Park.[33] A road was built from Naro Moru to the moorlands, allowing easier access.

Many new routes were climbed on Batian and Nelion in the next three decades, and in October 1959 the Mountain Club of Kenya produced their first guide to Mount Kenya and Kilimanjaro.[64] On Kenyan independence in 1963, Kisoi Munyao raised the Kenyan flag at the top of the mountain. He died in 2007 and was given a heroic funeral attended by the Kenyan president Mwai Kibaki.[67] In the early 1970s the Mount Kenya National Park Mountain Rescue Team was formed, and by the end of the 1970s, all major routes on the peaks had been climbed.[64]

On 19 July 2003, a South African registered aircraft, carrying 12 passengers and two crew, crashed into Mount Kenya at Point Lenana; nobody survived.[68][69] This was not the first aircraft lost on the mountain; there is also the wreckage of at least one helicopter that crashed before 1972.[70]

In March 2012 a massive fire raged on Mount Kenya, devouring thousands of hectares of ancient forests and endangered wildlife.[71]

Mountaineering

Video from a hike on Mount Kenya

Climbing routes

 
There are many peaks on Mount Kenya that require rock climbing.

Most of the peaks on Mount Kenya have been summited. The majority of these involve rock climbing as the easiest route, although some only require a scramble or a walk. The highest peak that can be ascended without climbing is Point Lenana, 4,985 m (16,355 ft).[33][64] The majority of the 15,000 visitors to the national park each year climb this peak. In contrast, approximately 200 people summit Nelion and 50 summit Batian, the two highest peaks.[20]

When ascended directly, Batian is usually climbed via the North Face Standard Route, UIAA grade IV+ (or 5.6+ YDS). The first recorded ascent of Batian was on 13 September 1899 by Sir Halford John Mackinder, Cesar Ollier, and Josef Brocherel. The Normal Route is the most climbed route up Nelion, and thence across to Batian. It was first climbed by Eric Shipton and Percy Wyn-Harris on 6 January 1929.[72][73] It is possible to traverse between the two peaks, via the Gates of Mist, but this often involves spending a night in the Howell hut on top of Nelion. There is a bolted abseil descent route off Nelion.[33]

Mount Kenya's climbing seasons are a result of its location only 20 km (12 mi) from the equator. During the northern summer, the rock routes on the north side of the peak are in good summer condition, while at the same time, the ice routes on the south side of the peak are in prime shape. The situation is reversed during the southern summer. The two seasons are separated by several months of the rainy season before and after, during which climbing conditions are generally unfavorable.[citation needed]

Mount Kenya is home to several good ice routes, the two most famous being the Diamond Couloir and the Ice Window route. Snow and ice levels on the mountain have been retreating at an accelerated rate in recent years, making these climbs increasingly difficult and dangerous. The Diamond Couloir, a steep ice couloir fed by the fusion of the upper Diamond Glacier, was first climbed by National Park staff Phil Snyder and Thumbi Mathenge in October 1973. A direct finish was pioneered in 1975 by Yvon Chouinard and Michael Covington[74] The couloir was once climbable in summer or winter but now is virtually unclimbable in summer conditions and is seldom deemed in climbable condition even in winter.[75] Last climbing reports describe the route very difficult, especially in the lower section. The route has changed into a modern ice climb with a very difficult 60m first pitch, starting with 8m of overhanging M7 dry tooling, followed by 50m of USA Grade V ice and by 6 pitches of moderate climbing on good ice and finally one pitch of water ice USA Grade IV+ ice at the headwall before getting to the Upper Diamond Glacier.

The satellite peaks around the mountain also provide good climbs. These can be climbed in Alpine style and vary in difficulty from a scramble to climbing at UIAA grade VI. They are useful for acclimatisation before climbing the higher peaks and as ascents in their own right.[33]

Walking routes

 
Map showing the walking routes and huts around Mount Kenya

There are eight walking routes up to the main peaks. Starting clockwise from the north these are the: Meru, Chogoria, Kamweti, Naro Moru, Burguret, Sirimon, and Timau Routes.[3] Of these Chogoria, Naro Moru, and Sirimon are used most frequently and therefore have staffed gates. The other routes require special permission from the Kenya Wildlife Service to use.[20][76]

The Chogoria route leads from Chogoria town up to the peaks circuit path. It heads through the forest to the south-east of the mountain to the moorland, with views over areas such as Ithanguni and the Giant's Billiards Table before following the Gorges Valley past the Temple and up to Simba Col below Point Lenana.[3] The Mountain Club of Kenya claims that Ithanguni and the Giant's Billiards Table offer some of the best hillwalking in Kenya.[33]

The Naro Moru route is taken by many of the trekkers who try to reach Point Lenana. It can be ascended in only 3 days and has bunkhouses at each camp. The route starts at Naro Moru town to the west of the mountain and climbs towards Mackinder's Camp before joining the Peak Circuit Path.[76] The terrain is usually good, although one section is called the Vertical Bog.[33]

The Sirimon route approaches Mount Kenya from the northwest.[3] The path splits on the moorlands, with the more frequently used fork following the Mackinder Valley and the quieter route traversing into the Liki North Valley.[3] The paths rejoin at Shipton's Cave just below Shipton's Camp on the Peak Circuit Path.[33]

The Peak Circuit Path is a path around the main peaks, with a distance of about 10 km (6 mi) and height gain and loss of over 2,000 m (6,600 ft).[3] It can be walked in one day, but more commonly takes two or three. It can also be used to join different ascent and descent routes. The route does not require technical climbing.[64][76]

Recent development

Development is currently underway for a new route up the mountain starting from the Ragati conservancy and running up the ridge between the Naro Moru route and the old Kamweti trail.

Accommodation

Accommodation on Mount Kenya ranges from very basic to luxurious. The more luxurious lodges are found on the lower slopes, in and around the forest.[77][78] These lodges have hotel-style accommodation, often with log fires and hot running water.[79][80] Many offer guided walks and other activities such as fishing and birdwatching.

The huts higher on the mountain are more basic. Most have several bunkrooms with beds and also offer somewhere to rest, cook and eat. Some also have running water. A few huts are very basic bothies and offer only a space to sleep that is sheltered from the weather.[33][needs update][81][needs update] Beds in the huts can be reserved at the park gates.[20][needs update] Camping is allowed anywhere in the National Park, but it is most encouraged around the huts to limit environmental impact. Campers can use the communal spaces in the huts for no extra fee.[20][needs update]

Etymology

The origin of the name Kenya is not clear but perhaps linked to the Kikuyu, Embu, and Kamba words Kirinyaga, Kirenyaa and Kiinyaa which mean "God's resting place" in all three languages.

In the 19th Century, the German explorer, Ludwig Krapf, recorded the name as both Kenia and Kegnia believed by some to be a corruption of the Kamba version.[58][82][83] Others however say that this was on the contrary a very precise notation of the correct African pronunciation /ˈkɛnjə/. [84] Wangari Maathai tells the following story about the naming: Krapf and Johannes Rebmann asked their guide, a member of the Kamba community, who was carrying a gourd, what they called the mountain, and the guide, believing that the Germans were referring to the gourd, replied kĩĩ-nyaa, which became the name of the mountain and then the country.[85] In any case, the name was for a long time pronounced by colonial-heritage Europeans as /ˈknjə/. The European pronunciation has been abandoned in modern times, in favor of the African version.[86]

Names of peaks

The peaks of Mount Kenya have been given names from three different sources. Firstly, several Maasai chieftains have been commemorated, with names such as Batian, Nelion, and Lenana. They commemorate Mbatian, a Maasai Laibon (Medicine Man), Nelieng, his brother, and Lenana and Sendeyo, his sons.[43] Terere is named after another Maasai headman.

The second type of name that was given to peaks is after European climbers and explorers. Some examples of this are Shipton, Sommerfelt, Tilman, Dutton, and Arthur.[33]

The remaining names are after well-known Kenyan personalities, except John and Peter, which were named by the missionary Arthur after two disciples. There is a group of four peaks to the east of the main peaks named after European settlers; Coryndon, Grigg, Delamere, and McMillan.[33]

See also

References

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Further reading

External links

  • "Mount Kenya National Park/Natural Forest". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. 2011. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
  • . Mount Kenya Trust. 2006. Archived from the original on 10 May 2015. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
  • . Kenya Wildlife Service. 2011. Archived from the original on 25 January 2010. Retrieved 28 June 2011.
  • "Mount Kenya, Kenya". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 27 July 2013.
  • "Mount Kenya Climbing Routes". 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2014.

mount, kenya, this, article, cites, sources, does, provide, page, references, help, improve, introducing, citations, that, more, precise, providing, page, numbers, existing, citations, september, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, kikuyu, kĩrĩ. This article cites its sources but does not provide page references You can help to improve it by introducing citations that are more precise and providing page numbers for existing citations September 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mount Kenya Kikuyu Kĩrĩnyaga Kamba Ki Nyaa is the highest mountain in Kenya and the second highest in Africa after Kilimanjaro 5 The highest peaks of the mountain are Batian 5 199 metres or 17 057 feet Nelion 5 188 m or 17 021 ft and Point Lenana 4 985 m or 16 355 ft Mount Kenya is located in the former Eastern and Central provinces of Kenya its peak is now the intersection of Meru Embu Kirinyaga Nyeri and Tharaka Nithi counties about 16 5 kilometres 10 3 miles south of the equator around 150 km 90 mi north northeast of the capital Nairobi 6 5 Mount Kenya is the source of the name of the Republic of Kenya Mount KenyaHighest pointElevation5 199 m 17 057 ft 1 Prominence3 825 m 12 549 ft 1 Ranked 32ndIsolation323 km 201 mi ListingSeven Second SummitsCountry high pointUltraCoordinates0 9 03 S 37 18 27 E 0 15083 S 37 30750 E 0 15083 37 30750 Coordinates 0 9 03 S 37 18 27 E 0 15083 S 37 30750 E 0 15083 37 30750 1 NamingNative nameKĩrĩnyaga Gikuyu Ki Nyaa Kamba GeographyMount KenyaKenyaTopo mapMount Kenya by Wielochowski and Savage 2 3 GeologyMountain typeStratovolcano extinct Last eruption2 6 3 1 MYAClimbingFirst ascent13 September 1899 by Mackinder Ollier and Brocherel although the peoples of Kenya believed God Ngai in Gikuyu resided on this mountain and regularly ascended the peaks to perform spiritual rites 4 Easiest routeRock climbMount Kenya is a volcano created approximately 3 million years after the opening of the East African Rift 7 Before glaciation it was 7 000 m 23 000 ft high It was covered by an ice cap for thousands of years This has resulted in very eroded slopes and numerous valleys radiating from the peak 8 9 There are currently 11 small glaciers which are shrinking rapidly and may disappear by 2050 10 The forested slopes are an important source of water for much of Kenya 11 There are several vegetation bands from the base to the peak 12 The lower slopes are covered by different types of forest Many alpine species are endemic to Mount Kenya such as the giant lobelias and senecios and a local subspecies of rock hyrax 13 An area of 715 km2 276 sq mi around the centre of the mountain was designated a National Park and listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997 14 The park receives over 16 000 visitors per year 15 11 Contents 1 Mount Kenya National Park 2 Local culture 2 1 Kikuyu 2 2 Embu 2 3 Ameru 2 4 Maasai 3 Geology 4 Peaks 5 Glaciers 5 1 Periglacial landforms 6 Rivers 7 Natural history 7 1 Zones 7 2 Flora 7 3 Fauna 8 Climate 8 1 Seasons 8 2 Daily pattern 9 History 9 1 European documentation 9 2 Mackinder s expedition 9 3 1900 1930 9 4 1931 to present day 10 Mountaineering 10 1 Climbing routes 10 2 Walking routes 11 Recent development 11 1 Accommodation 12 Etymology 12 1 Names of peaks 13 See also 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksMount Kenya National Park Edit Mount Kenya as seen from a SkySat satellite Main article Mount Kenya National Park Mount Kenya National Park established in 1949 protects the region surrounding the mountain Currently the national park is within the forest reserve which encircles it 16 In April 1978 the area was designated a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve 17 The national park and the forest reserve combined became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1997 14 The Government of Kenya had four reasons for creating a national park on and around Mount Kenya These were the importance of tourism for the local and national economies preserving an area of great scenic beauty conserving the biodiversity within the park and preserving the water catchment for the surrounding area 11 Kenya s government has announced a project to discourage animals from straying into small holdings surrounding the Park and devastating crops The project will see the Park enclosed by an electric fence with five electrified strands Kenya s Rhino Ark Trust a non profit organization has been putting up fences in key areas around the country As of 2021 250 kilometres 160 miles out of a planned 450 kilometres 280 miles have been constructed in the Mt Kenya area 18 The fence discharges an electric shock but is not dangerous to humans or animals 19 Local culture Edit Mount Kenya is important to all the ethnic communities living around it The main ethnic groups living around Mount Kenya are Kikuyu Ameru Embu and Maasai The first three are closely related They all see the mountain as an important aspect of their cultures All these cultures arrived in the Mount Kenya area in the last several hundred years Kikuyu Edit Several ethnic groups that live around Mount Kenya believe the mountain to be sacred They used to build their houses facing the mountain with the doors on the side nearest to it The Kikuyu live on the southern and western sides of the mountain They are agriculturalists and make use of the highly fertile volcanic soil on the lower slopes They believe that God Ngai or Mwene Nyaga lived on Mount Kenya when he came down from the sky 4 They believe that the mountain is Ngai s throne on earth It is the place where Gĩkũyũ the father of the tribe used to meet with God Thus according to the Kikuyu records Gĩkũyũ is the first person on Earth to ascend the mountain Mwene Nyaga in the Kikuyu language can also translate as the Owner of the Ostriches or Owner of the white patches of snow where Mwene translates to owner and Nyaga to Ostriches or white patches The snow in Kikuyu Ira caps of the mountain symbolically represent a crown on God s habitation Kikuyu used to build their houses with doors facing the mountain 20 The Kikuyu name for Mount Kenya is Kirima Kĩrĩ Nyaga Mt Kirinyaga which literally translates to the mountain that has the Nyaga Ostriches The mountain therefore is locally accepted as God s Resting Place or Where God Lives citation needed The Kikuyu name for Mt Kenya is Kĩrĩnyaga which literally means the one with the ostrich The ostrich has black or brownish grey feathers with patches of white The Kikuyu attributed an ostrich s likeness to an object that was dark coloured with white patches The name Kĩrĩnyaga therefore figuratively means the one with white patches referring to the glaciers among the peaks of the mountain Translated to the Kamba language kĩrĩnyaga would be ki nyaa This is the name that Ludwig Kraph was given when he sighted the mountain from Kitui in Kamba country He recorded it as Kenya It became the name of not only the mountain but also the country 21 Embu Edit The Embu people live to the south east of Mount Kenya 13 and believe that the mountain is God s home the Embu word for God is Ngai or Mwene Njeru The mountain is sacred and they build their houses with the doors facing toward it 20 The Embu people are closely related to the Ameru and Mbeere people 22 The Mbeere and Akamba are the settlers of the southeast side of the mountain 23 Ameru Edit The Ameru occupy the east north and north western slopes of the mountain They are generally agricultural and also keep livestock and occupy what is among the most fertile land in Kenya The Meru god Murungu was from the skies Their name for Mt Kenya is Kirimara which means mountain with white features 24 Maasai Edit Mount Kenya lies in the Kenyan highlands 150 km 90 mi north northeast of Nairobi just northeast of Nyeri 5 The Maasai are semi nomadic people who use the land to the north of the mountain to graze their cattle 25 They believe that their ancestors came down from the mountain at the beginning of time 20 The Maasai name for Mount Kenya is Ol Donyo Keri which means mountain of stripes referring to the dark shades as observed from the surrounding plains 26 At least one Maasai prayer refers to Mount Kenya God bless our children let them be like the olive tree of Morintat let them grow and expand let them be like Ngong Hills like Mt Kenya like Mt Kilimanjaro and multiply in number Collected by Francis Sakuda of Oloshoibor Peace Museum 26 Geology Edit Mount Kenya was a stratovolcano and probably looked similar to Mt Fuji citation needed shown above The lower slopes are still this shape which is how the previous height is estimated The central peaks of Mount Kenya are volcanic plugs that have resisted glacial erosion 9 Left to right Point Thompson 4955m Batian 5199m and Nelion 5188m Mount Kenya is a stratovolcano that was active in the Plio Pleistocene The original crater was probably over 6 000 m 19 700 ft high higher than Kilimanjaro Since it became extinct there have been two major periods of glaciation which are shown by two main rings of moraines below the glaciers The lowest moraine is found at around 3 300 m 10 800 ft 27 Today the glaciers reach no lower than 4 650 m 15 260 ft 3 After studying the moraines Gregory put forward the theory that at one time the whole summit of the mountain was covered with an ice cap and it was this that eroded the peaks to how they are today 8 The lower slopes of the mountain have never been glaciated They are now mainly cultivated and forested They are distinguished by steep sided V shaped valleys with many tributaries Higher up the mountain in the area that is now moorland the valleys become U shaped and shallower with flatter bottoms These were created by glaciation 27 When Mount Kenya was active there was some satellite activity The northeastern side of the mountain has many old volcanic plugs and craters The largest of these Ithanguni even had its own ice cap when the main peaks were covered in ice This can be seen by the smoothed summit of the peak Circular hills with steep sides are also frequent in this area which are probably the remains of small plugged vents However as the remaining mountain is roughly symmetrical most of the activity must have occurred at the central plug 27 The rocks that form Mount Kenya are mainly basalts rhomb porphyrites phonolites kenytes and trachytes 27 Kenyte was first reported by Gregory in 1900 following his study of the geology of Mount Kenya 28 The geology of the Mount Kenya area was first described scientifically by Joseph Thomson in 1883 He saw the mountain from the nearby Laikipia Plateau and wrote that it was an extinct volcano with the plug exposed 29 However as he had only seen the mountain from a distance his description was not widely believed in Europe particularly after 1887 when Teleki and von Hohnel ascended the mountain and described what they considered to be the crater 30 In 1893 Gregory s expedition reached the Lewis Glacier at 5 000 m 16 400 ft He confirmed that the volcano was extinct and that there were glaciers present 28 30 The first thorough survey by Europeans was not undertaken until 1966 27 Peaks Edit The main peaks and glaciers of Mount Kenya are near the centre of the mountain The peaks of Mount Kenya are almost all of volcanic origin The majority of the peaks are located near the centre of the mountain These peaks have an Alpine appearance due to their craggy nature Typically of Alpine terrain the highest peaks and gendarmes occur at the intersection of ridges 9 The central peaks only have a few mosses lichens and small alpine plants growing in rock crevices 13 Further away from the central peaks the volcanic plugs are covered in volcanic ash and soils 31 The vegetation growing on these peaks is typical for their vegetation band The highest peaks are Batian 5 199 m or 17 057 ft Nelion 5 188 m or 17 021 ft and Pt Lenana 4 985 m or 16 355 ft Batian and Nelion are within 250 m 270 yd of each other separated by the Gate of the Mists gap of 5 144 m 16 877 ft 3 32 Coryndon Peak 4 960 m or 16 273 ft is the next highest but unlike the previous peaks it does not form a part of the central plug 9 Other peaks around the central plug include Pt Piggot 4 957 m or 16 263 ft Pt Dutton 4 885 m or 16 027 ft Pt John 4 883 m or 16 020 ft Pt John Minor 4 875 m or 15 994 ft Krapf Rognon 4 800 m or 15 748 ft Pt Peter 4 757 m or 15 607 ft Pt Slade 4 750 m or 15 584 ft and Midget Peak 4 700 m or 15 420 ft All of these have a steep pyramidal form 3 9 Significant craggy outlying peaks include Terere 4 714 m or 15 466 ft and Sendeyo 4 704 m or 15 433 ft which form a pair of twin peaks to the north of the main plug Together they form a large parasitic plug Other notable peaks include The Hat 4 639 m or 15 220 ft Delamere Peak Macmillan Peak and Rotundu 3 Batian on the left Nelion on the right and Slade in the foreground Lenana the third highest peak is the most ascended Mount Kenya left to right Point Lenana 4985m Nelion summit 5188 Batian summit 5199m Krapf Rognon 4 800 m or 15 748 ft and Krapf glacier Midget peak can be climbed in a day 33 Terere and Sendeyo are two craggy outlying peaks Mugi hill and the Giant s Billiards Table offers some of the best hillwalking in Kenya 20 Nelion from Batian in Dec 1974 Looking down the Diamond Glacier to Pt JohnGlaciers Edit The Lewis Glacier is the largest on Mount Kenya The glaciers on Mount Kenya are retreating rapidly The Mountain Club of Kenya in Nairobi has photographs showing the mountain at the time of the first recorded ascent in 1899 and again more recently the retreat of the glaciers is very evident 34 35 Descriptions of ascents of several of the peaks advise the use of crampons but this is true only in some cases and at higher elevations Every year there is less new snow accumulating in winter than melting in summer even on the Lewis Glacier the largest of them in winter so there is no formation of new ice It is predicted to be less than 30 years before there will no longer be ice on Mount Kenya 20 Glacial retreat and disappearance can be caused by changes in temperature trends or by a change in precipitation trends 36 The glacier names are clockwise from the north Northey Krapf Gregory Lewis Diamond Darwin Forel Heim Tyndall Cesar Josef Frost heaving causes patterned solifluction lobes below Mugi Hill The total area covered by glaciers on the mountain was recorded as about 0 7 km2 1 4 sq mi in the 1980s 37 far less than that recorded by the first observations made in the 1890s Periglacial landforms Edit Although Mount Kenya is on the equator the freezing nightly temperatures result in periglacial landforms There is permafrost a few centimetres inches below the surface Patterned ground is present at 3 400 m 11 155 ft to the west of Mugi Hill 3 9 These mounds grow because the repeated freezing and thawing of the ground draws in more water There are blockfields present around 4 000 m 13 123 ft where the ground has cracked to form hexagons Solifluction occurs when the night temperatures freeze the soil before it thaws again in the morning This daily expansion and contraction of the soil prevent the establishment of vegetation 33 Rivers Edit Runoff from Mount Kenya provides water for over 2 million people 11 Mount Kenya is the main water catchment area for two large rivers in Kenya the Tana the largest river in Kenya and the Ewaso Nyiro North 11 The Mount Kenya ecosystem provides water directly for over 2 million people 11 The rivers on Mount Kenya have been named after the villages on the slopes of the mountain that they flow close to The Thuchi River is the district boundary between Tharaka Nithi and Embu Mount Kenya is a major water tower for the Tana river which in 1988 supplied 80 of Kenya s electricity using a series of seven hydroelectric power stations and dams 38 The density of streams is very high especially on the lower slopes which have never been glaciated The ice cap which used to cover the mountain during the Pliocene eroded large U shaped valleys which tend to only have one large stream 9 Where the original shape of the shield volcano is still preserved there have been millions of years for streams to erode the hillside This area is therefore characterised by frequent deep fluvial V shaped valleys 39 The gradual transition from glaciated to the fluvial valley can be clearly observed 40 Rivers that start on Mount Kenya are the tributaries of two large Kenyan rivers the Tana and the Ewaso Ng iro rivers A lot of Mount Kenyan rivers flow into the Sagana which itself is a tributary of the Tana which joins at the Masinga Reservoir The rivers in the northern part of the mountain such as the Burguret Naru Moru Nanyuki Likii and Sirimon flow into the Ewaso Nyiro The rivers to the southwest such as the Keringa and Nairobi flow into the Sagana and then into the Tana The remaining rivers to the south and east such as the Kathita Largest River in Meru Mutonga Nithi Thuchi and Nyamindi flow directly into the Tana 39 40 Natural history EditMain article Natural history of Mount Kenya Mount Kenya has several altitudinal ecological zones from the savanna surrounding the mountain to the nival zone by the glaciers Each zone has a dominant species of vegetation Many of the species found higher up the mountain are endemic either to Mount Kenya or East Africa 13 There are also differences within the zones depending on the side of the mountain and the aspect of the slope The southeast is much wetter than the north 37 so species more dependent on moisture can grow Some species such as the bamboo Yushania alpina are limited to certain aspects of the mountain because of the amount of moisture 3 Zones Edit There are distinct vegetation zones around Mount Kenya which vary according to altitude and aspect The climate of Mount Kenya changes considerably with altitude forming belts of community types 41 Around the base of the mountain is fertile farmland The people living around the mountain have cultivated this cool relatively moist area for centuries 42 Mount Kenya is surrounded by forests The vegetation in the forests depend on rainfall and the species present differ greatly between the northern and southern slopes 43 As time has passed the trees on the edge of the forest have been logged and the farmland has encroached further up the fertile slopes of the mountain 41 42 Above the forest is a belt of Yushania alpina African alpine bamboo This zone is almost continuous but is restricted to small isolated bunches in the north because of low rainfall The bamboo is natural 33 and does not require forest disturbance Tracks are common through the bamboo Bamboo suppresses other vegetation so it is uncommon to find trees or other plants here 3 The timberline forest is commonly in cloud The trees are relatively small and covered in lichens and mosses Above the bamboo is the timberline forest The trees here are often smaller than the trees in the forests lower down the mountain 44 The forest here is more intact because it is less accessible and better protected When the trees can no longer grow the vegetation changes into heathland and chaparral at around 3 000 m 9 800 ft Heathland is found in the wetter areas on the west side of Mount Kenya and is dominated by giant heathers Chaparral is found in drier areas and grasses are more common 33 and bushfires still occur 42 As the altitude increases the temperature fluctuations become extreme and the air becomes thinner and drier This region is known as the Afro alpine zone The environment here is isolated with the only similar area nearby being the Aberdares which are 80 km 50 mi away 13 Many of the species here are endemic with adaptations to the cold and fluctuating temperatures 45 Typical plants here include giant groundsels senecios and giant lobelias 13 The region where the glaciers have recently retreated from is nival zone It is the area that plants have not yet been able to colonise 13 Flora Edit Many plants that live on Mount Kenya like this Senecio keniodendron have to be specially adapted to the extremes in temperature The flora found on Mount Kenya varies with altitude aspect and exposure 46 As the altitude increases the plants have to be more specialised with adaptations to strong sunlight with ultraviolet lower mean temperatures and freezing night temperatures 33 44 Plants in the Afro alpine zone have overcome these difficulties in several ways 45 One adaptation is known as the giant rosette which is exhibited by giant senecio giant lobelia and giant thistle Carduus which use bud leaves to protect their buds from freezing Giant rosette senecios form single aged stands that drive community structure over decades 47 Many plant species in the Afro alpine zone of Mount Kenya are giant versions of lowland or temperate relatives However nearer the nival zone the plants decrease in size again 13 Hyrax can cope with a more extreme climate and are found up to the highest elevation Fauna Edit Safari ants swarm around the forest in long columns They are easiest to see when they cross the tracks The majority of animals live lower down on the slopes of Mount Kenya Here there is more vegetation and the climate is less extreme Various species of monkeys several antelopes tree hyrax porcupines and some larger animals such as elephants and buffalo all live in the forest 3 Predators found here include hyenas and leopards and occasionally lions 3 There are fewer mammals found at high altitudes on Mount Kenya 48 The Mount Kenya hyrax and common duiker can live here and are important to the ecosystem Some smaller mammals such as the groove toothed rat can live here by burrowing into the giant senecios and using their thick stem of dead leaves as insulation 13 The Mount Kenya mole rat Tachyoryctes rex occurs at high altitudes living in visible mounds 49 Leopards are resident in the alpine zone Other mammal species are only occasional visitors Remains of elephants monkeys and bongo have been found high in the alpine zone 48 and other sightings are remembered in names such as Simba Tarn simba means lion in Swahili 33 Several bird species live in the Afro alpine zone including sunbirds alpine chats and starlings and the raptors augur buzzard lammergeier and Verreaux s eagle the latter of which specializes in hunting hyraxes Birds are important in this ecosystem as pollinators 46 Climate EditMain article Climate of Mount Kenya The climate of Mount Kenya has played a critical role in the development of the mountain influencing the topography and ecology amongst other factors It has a typical equatorial mountain climate which Hedberg described as winter every night and summer every day 50 Mount Kenya is home to one of the Global Atmosphere Watch s atmospheric monitoring stations 51 Seasons Edit In January the Intertropical Convergence Zone is at its southern extreme over the Indian Ocean In July it is at its northern extreme over Tibet and Arabia As it passes over the equator Mount Kenya experiences a wet season 52 The year is divided into two distinct wet seasons and two distinct dry seasons which mirror the wet and dry seasons in the Kenyan lowlands 53 As Mount Kenya ranges in height from 1 374 to 5 199 m 4 508 to 17 057 ft the climate varies considerably over the mountain and has different zones of influence The lower southeastern slopes are the wettest as the predominant weather system comes from the Indian ocean This rainfall supports dense montane forests on these slopes High on the mountain most of the precipitation falls as snow 54 Combined these water sources feed 11 glaciers The current climate on Mount Kenya is wet but drier than it has been in the past The temperatures span a wide range which diminishes with altitude In the lower alpine zone temperature usually do not go below 12 C 54 F 55 Snow and rain are common from March to December but especially in the two wet seasons The wet seasons combined account for 5 6 of the annual precipitation The monsoon which controls the wet and dry seasons means that most of the year there are south easterly winds but during January and February the dominant wind direction is north easterly citation needed Mount Kenya like most locations in the tropics has two wet seasons and two dry seasons as a result of the monsoon From mid March to June the heavy rain season known as the long rains brings approximately half of the annual rainfall on the mountain 42 This is followed by the wetter of the two dry seasons which lasts until September October to December are the short rains when the mountain receives approximately a third of its rainfall total Finally from December to mid March is the drier dry season when the mountain experiences the least rain citation needed Daily pattern Edit During the dry season the mountain almost always follows the same daily weather pattern Large daily temperature fluctuations occur which led Hedberg to exclaim winter every night and summer every day 50 There is variation in minimum and maximum temperatures day to day but the standard deviation of the mean hourly pattern is small citation needed In the dry season mornings are typically clear and cool but the mountain is hidden in cloud by mid day A typical day is clear and cool in the morning with low humidity The mountain is in direct sunlight which causes the temperatures to rise quickly with the warmest temperatures occurring between 0900 and 1200 This corresponds to a maximum in the pressure usually around 10 A M Low on the mountain between 2 400 and 3 900 m 7 874 and 12 795 ft clouds begin to form over the western forest zone due to moist air from Lake Victoria 38 The anabatic winds caused by warm rising air gradually bring these clouds to the summit region in the afternoon Around 1500 there is a minimum in sunlight and a maximum in humidity causing the actual and perceived temperature to drop At 1600 there is a minimum of pressure This daily cover of clouds protects the glaciers on the southwest of the mountain which would otherwise get direct sun every day enhancing their melt 56 The upwelling cloud eventually reaches the dry easterly air streams and dissipates leading to a clear sky by 5 P M There is another maximum temperature associated with this citation needed Being an equatorial mountain the daylight hours are constant with twelve hour days Sunrise is about 0630 with the sun setting at 1830 both EAT UTC 3 Over the year there is a one minute difference between the shortest and longest days 57 At night the sky is usually clear with katabatic winds blowing down the valleys Above the lower alpine zone there is usually frost every night 55 History EditEuropean documentation Edit Joseph Thomson reached the foothills of Mount Kenya and confirmed Krapf s discovery The first European to report seeing Mount Kenya was Dr Johann Ludwig Krapf a German missionary from Kitui 58 a town 160 km 100 mi 5 away from the mountain The sighting was made on 3 December 1849 43 a year after the first sighting of Mount Kilimanjaro by a European 59 Krapf was told by the Embu people that lived around the mountain that they did not ascend high enough on the mountain because of the intense cold and the white matter that rolled down the mountains with a loud noise This led him to infer that glaciers existed on the mountain 58 It was Krapf who gave the mountain the name Kenya but the derivation of this is not known with certainty citation needed Count Samuel Teleki was the first European to set foot on Mount Kenya His expedition reached 4 350 m 14 270 ft Krapf also noted that the rivers flowing from Mount Kenya and other mountains in the area were continuously flowing This was very different from the other rivers in the area which swelled up in the wet season and completely dried up after the rainy season had ended As the streams flowed even in the driest seasons he concluded that there must be a source of water up on the mountain in the form of glaciers 58 He believed the mountain to be the source of the White Nile 60 In 1851 Krapf returned to Kitui He travelled 65 kilometres 40 mi closer to the mountain but did not see it again In 1877 Hildebrandt was in the Kitui area and heard stories about the mountain but also did not see it Since there were no confirmations to back up Krapf s claim people began to be suspicious 30 Eventually in 1883 Joseph Thomson passed close by the west side of the mountain and confirmed Krapf s claim He diverted his expedition and reached 1 737 m 5 700 ft up the slopes of the mountain but had to retreat because of trouble with local people 29 However the first European exploration high onto the mountain was achieved in 1887 by Count Samuel Teleki He managed to reach 4 350 m 14 270 ft on the southwestern slopes 61 On this expedition Teleki mistakenly believed he had found the crater of a volcano In 1892 Teleki and von Hohnel returned to the eastern side but were unable to get through the forest 13 Finally in 1893 an expedition managed to ascend Mount Kenya as far as the glaciers This expedition was traveling from the coast to Lake Baringo in the Rift Valley and was led by Dr John W Gregory a British geologist They managed to ascend the mountain to around 4 730 m 15 520 ft and spent several hours on the Lewis Glacier with their guide On his return to Britain Gregory published papers and a narrative account of his achievements 33 George Kolb a German physician made expeditions in 1894 and 1896 33 and was the first to reach the moorlands on the east side of the mountain More exploration occurred after 1899 when the Uganda Railway was completed as far as the future site of Nairobi 33 62 Mackinder s expedition Edit On 28 July 1899 62 Sir Halford John Mackinder set out from the site of Nairobi on an expedition to Mount Kenya The members of the expedition consisted of 6 Europeans 66 Swahilis 2 Maasai guides and 96 Kikuyu The Europeans were Campbell B Hausberg second in command and photographer Douglas Saunders botanist C F Camburn taxidermist Cesar Ollier guide and Josef Brocherel guide and porter 62 The expedition made it as far as the mountain but encountered many difficulties on the way The country they passed through was full of plague and famine Many Kikuyu porters tried to desert with women from the villages and others stole from the villages which made the chiefs very hostile towards the expedition When they reached the base camp on 18 August 62 they could not find any food suffered two of their party killed by the local people and eventually had to send Saunders to Naivasha to get help from Captain Gorges the Government Officer there 62 Mackinder pushed on up the mountain and established a camp at 3 142 m 10 310 ft 62 in the Hohnel Valley He made his first attempt on the summit on 30 August with Ollier and Brocherel up the southeast face but they had to retreat when they were within 100 m 330 ft of the summit of Nelion due to nightfall On 5 September Hausberg Ollier and Brocherel made a circuit of the main peaks looking for an easier route to the summit They could not find one On 11 September Ollier and Brocherel made an ascent of the Darwin Glacier but were forced to retreat due to a blizzard 62 When Saunders returned from Naivasha with the relief party Mackinder had another attempt at the summit with Ollier and Brocherel They traversed the Lewis Glacier and climbed the southeast face of Nelion They spent the night near the gendarme and traversed the snowfield at the head of the Darwin Glacier at dawn before cutting steps up the Diamond Glacier They reached the summit of Batian at noon on 13 September 1899 and descended by the same route 62 During the expedition Mackinder ordered for 8 of the 90 African porters who he had bought from a slave owner to carry his supplies to be shot 63 1900 1930 Edit Shipton and Russell made the first ascent of Point John up the south east gully in 1929 After the first ascent of Mount Kenya there were fewer expeditions there for a while The majority of the exploration until after the First World War was by settlers in Kenya who were not on scientific expeditions A Church of Scotland mission was set up in Chogoria and several Scottish missionaries ascended to the peaks including Rev Dr J W Arthur G Dennis and A R Barlow There were other ascents but none succeeded in summitting Batian or Nelion 33 New approach routes were cleared through the forest which made access to the area of the peak far easier In 1920 Arthur and Sir Fowell Buxton tried to cut a route in from the south and other routes came in from Nanyuki in the north but the most commonly used was the route from the Chogoria mission in the east built by Ernest Carr Carr is also credited with building Urumandi and Top Huts 33 On 6 January 1929 the first ascent of Nelion was made by Percy Wyn Harris and Eric Shipton They climbed the Normal Route then descended to the Gate of Mists before ascending Batian On 8 January they reascended this time with G A Sommerfelt and in December Shipton made another ascent with R E G Russell They also made the first ascent of Point John During this year the Mountain Club of East Africa was formed 33 At the end of July 1930 Shipton and Bill Tilman made the first traverse of the peaks They ascended by the West Ridge of Batian traversed the Gate of Mists to Nelion and descended the Normal Route During this trip Shipton and Tilman made the first ascents of several other peaks including Point Peter Point Dutton Midget Peak Point Pigott and either Terere or Sendeyo 64 1931 to present day Edit In the early 1930s there were several visits to the moorlands around Mount Kenya with fewer as far as the peaks Raymond Hook and Humphrey Slade ascended to map the mountain and stocked several of the streams with trout By 1938 there had been several more ascents of Nelion In February Miss C Carroll and Mtu Muthara became the first woman and African respectively to ascend Nelion in an expedition with Noel Symington author of The Night Climbers of Cambridge and on 5 March Miss Una Cameron became the first woman to ascend Batian 33 During the Second World War there was another drop in the ascents of the mountain The most remarkable ascent during this period was by three Italians who were being held in a British POW camp at the base of the mountain in Nanyuki They escaped from camp to climb the mountain s third peak Point Lenana before escaping back into camp Felice Benuzzi the team leader retold his story in the book No Picnic on Mount Kenya 1946 65 66 In 1949 the Mountain Club of Kenya split from the Mountain Club of East Africa and the area above 3 400 m 11 150 ft was designated a National Park 33 A road was built from Naro Moru to the moorlands allowing easier access Many new routes were climbed on Batian and Nelion in the next three decades and in October 1959 the Mountain Club of Kenya produced their first guide to Mount Kenya and Kilimanjaro 64 On Kenyan independence in 1963 Kisoi Munyao raised the Kenyan flag at the top of the mountain He died in 2007 and was given a heroic funeral attended by the Kenyan president Mwai Kibaki 67 In the early 1970s the Mount Kenya National Park Mountain Rescue Team was formed and by the end of the 1970s all major routes on the peaks had been climbed 64 On 19 July 2003 a South African registered aircraft carrying 12 passengers and two crew crashed into Mount Kenya at Point Lenana nobody survived 68 69 This was not the first aircraft lost on the mountain there is also the wreckage of at least one helicopter that crashed before 1972 70 In March 2012 a massive fire raged on Mount Kenya devouring thousands of hectares of ancient forests and endangered wildlife 71 Mountaineering EditMain article Mountaineering on Mount Kenya source source source source source source source source source source source source source source Video from a hike on Mount Kenya Climbing routes Edit There are many peaks on Mount Kenya that require rock climbing Most of the peaks on Mount Kenya have been summited The majority of these involve rock climbing as the easiest route although some only require a scramble or a walk The highest peak that can be ascended without climbing is Point Lenana 4 985 m 16 355 ft 33 64 The majority of the 15 000 visitors to the national park each year climb this peak In contrast approximately 200 people summit Nelion and 50 summit Batian the two highest peaks 20 When ascended directly Batian is usually climbed via the North Face Standard Route UIAA grade IV or 5 6 YDS The first recorded ascent of Batian was on 13 September 1899 by Sir Halford John Mackinder Cesar Ollier and Josef Brocherel The Normal Route is the most climbed route up Nelion and thence across to Batian It was first climbed by Eric Shipton and Percy Wyn Harris on 6 January 1929 72 73 It is possible to traverse between the two peaks via the Gates of Mist but this often involves spending a night in the Howell hut on top of Nelion There is a bolted abseil descent route off Nelion 33 Mount Kenya s climbing seasons are a result of its location only 20 km 12 mi from the equator During the northern summer the rock routes on the north side of the peak are in good summer condition while at the same time the ice routes on the south side of the peak are in prime shape The situation is reversed during the southern summer The two seasons are separated by several months of the rainy season before and after during which climbing conditions are generally unfavorable citation needed Mount Kenya is home to several good ice routes the two most famous being the Diamond Couloir and the Ice Window route Snow and ice levels on the mountain have been retreating at an accelerated rate in recent years making these climbs increasingly difficult and dangerous The Diamond Couloir a steep ice couloir fed by the fusion of the upper Diamond Glacier was first climbed by National Park staff Phil Snyder and Thumbi Mathenge in October 1973 A direct finish was pioneered in 1975 by Yvon Chouinard and Michael Covington 74 The couloir was once climbable in summer or winter but now is virtually unclimbable in summer conditions and is seldom deemed in climbable condition even in winter 75 Last climbing reports describe the route very difficult especially in the lower section The route has changed into a modern ice climb with a very difficult 60m first pitch starting with 8m of overhanging M7 dry tooling followed by 50m of USA Grade V ice and by 6 pitches of moderate climbing on good ice and finally one pitch of water ice USA Grade IV ice at the headwall before getting to the Upper Diamond Glacier The satellite peaks around the mountain also provide good climbs These can be climbed in Alpine style and vary in difficulty from a scramble to climbing at UIAA grade VI They are useful for acclimatisation before climbing the higher peaks and as ascents in their own right 33 Walking routes Edit Map showing the walking routes and huts around Mount Kenya There are eight walking routes up to the main peaks Starting clockwise from the north these are the Meru Chogoria Kamweti Naro Moru Burguret Sirimon and Timau Routes 3 Of these Chogoria Naro Moru and Sirimon are used most frequently and therefore have staffed gates The other routes require special permission from the Kenya Wildlife Service to use 20 76 The Chogoria route leads from Chogoria town up to the peaks circuit path It heads through the forest to the south east of the mountain to the moorland with views over areas such as Ithanguni and the Giant s Billiards Table before following the Gorges Valley past the Temple and up to Simba Col below Point Lenana 3 The Mountain Club of Kenya claims that Ithanguni and the Giant s Billiards Table offer some of the best hillwalking in Kenya 33 The Naro Moru route is taken by many of the trekkers who try to reach Point Lenana It can be ascended in only 3 days and has bunkhouses at each camp The route starts at Naro Moru town to the west of the mountain and climbs towards Mackinder s Camp before joining the Peak Circuit Path 76 The terrain is usually good although one section is called the Vertical Bog 33 The Sirimon route approaches Mount Kenya from the northwest 3 The path splits on the moorlands with the more frequently used fork following the Mackinder Valley and the quieter route traversing into the Liki North Valley 3 The paths rejoin at Shipton s Cave just below Shipton s Camp on the Peak Circuit Path 33 The Peak Circuit Path is a path around the main peaks with a distance of about 10 km 6 mi and height gain and loss of over 2 000 m 6 600 ft 3 It can be walked in one day but more commonly takes two or three It can also be used to join different ascent and descent routes The route does not require technical climbing 64 76 The Gorges Valley is a major feature on the Chogoria Route Vertical bog on Mount Kenya on the Naro Moru Route Looking towards the peaks up the Mackinder Valley on the Sirimon Route Recent development EditDevelopment is currently underway for a new route up the mountain starting from the Ragati conservancy and running up the ridge between the Naro Moru route and the old Kamweti trail Accommodation Edit Accommodation on Mount Kenya ranges from very basic to luxurious The more luxurious lodges are found on the lower slopes in and around the forest 77 78 These lodges have hotel style accommodation often with log fires and hot running water 79 80 Many offer guided walks and other activities such as fishing and birdwatching The huts higher on the mountain are more basic Most have several bunkrooms with beds and also offer somewhere to rest cook and eat Some also have running water A few huts are very basic bothies and offer only a space to sleep that is sheltered from the weather 33 needs update 81 needs update Beds in the huts can be reserved at the park gates 20 needs update Camping is allowed anywhere in the National Park but it is most encouraged around the huts to limit environmental impact Campers can use the communal spaces in the huts for no extra fee 20 needs update Austrian Hut is found near the Lewis Glacier on the slopes of Point Lenana The hut sleeps 30 people with Top Hut nearby for porters 33 Liki North Hut is a small bothy in the Liki North Valley 33 It offers little more than shelter from the weather Shipton s Camp is at the top of the Sirimon Route 64 It has a large communal area and running cold water Camping is allowed anywhere within the National Park 20 Fairmont Mount Kenya Safari Club is a resort located in Nanyuki at the base of Mount Kenya The resort has over 120 rooms and is one of the most exclusive in the region 78 Etymology EditMain article List of names on Mount Kenya The origin of the name Kenya is not clear but perhaps linked to the Kikuyu Embu and Kamba words Kirinyaga Kirenyaa and Kiinyaa which mean God s resting place in all three languages In the 19th Century the German explorer Ludwig Krapf recorded the name as both Kenia and Kegnia believed by some to be a corruption of the Kamba version 58 82 83 Others however say that this was on the contrary a very precise notation of the correct African pronunciation ˈ k ɛ n j e 84 Wangari Maathai tells the following story about the naming Krapf and Johannes Rebmann asked their guide a member of the Kamba community who was carrying a gourd what they called the mountain and the guide believing that the Germans were referring to the gourd replied kĩĩ nyaa which became the name of the mountain and then the country 85 In any case the name was for a long time pronounced by colonial heritage Europeans as ˈ k iː n j e The European pronunciation has been abandoned in modern times in favor of the African version 86 Names of peaks Edit The peaks of Mount Kenya have been given names from three different sources Firstly several Maasai chieftains have been commemorated with names such as Batian Nelion and Lenana They commemorate Mbatian a Maasai Laibon Medicine Man Nelieng his brother and Lenana and Sendeyo his sons 43 Terere is named after another Maasai headman The second type of name that was given to peaks is after European climbers and explorers Some examples of this are Shipton Sommerfelt Tilman Dutton and Arthur 33 The remaining names are after well known Kenyan personalities except John and Peter which were named by the missionary Arthur after two disciples There is a group of four peaks to the east of the main peaks named after European settlers Coryndon Grigg Delamere and McMillan 33 See also EditList of volcanoes in Kenya Volcanic Seven SummitsReferences Edit a b c Africa Ultra Prominences Peaklist org Retrieved 6 February 2012 Mount Kenya Map Sample Ewpnet com Archived from the original on 21 August 2010 Retrieved 16 April 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Mount Kenya Map and Guide Map 4th ed 1 50 000 with 1 25 000 inset EWP Map Guides Cartography by EWP EWP 2007 ISBN 978 0 906227 96 1 Archived from the original on 27 February 2009 a b Kenyatta Jomo 1961 Facing Mount Kenya London Secker and Warburg ISBN 978 0 435 90219 3 a b c d Rough Guide Map Kenya Map 9 ed 1 900 000 Rough Guide Map Cartography by World Mapping Project Rough Guide 2006 ISBN 1 84353 359 6 Where is Mount Kenya Located WorldAtlas 8 June 2018 Philippe Nonnotte Etude volcano tectonique de la zone de divergence Nord Tanzanienne terminaison sud du rift kenyan Caracterisation petrologique et geochimique du volcanisme recent 8 Ma Actuel et du manteau source Contraintes de mise en place these de doctorat de l universite de Bretagne occidentale specialite geosciences marines PDF a b Gregory J W 1894 Contributions to the Geology of British East Africa Part I The Glacial Geology of Mount Kenya Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society 50 1 4 515 530 doi 10 1144 GSL JGS 1894 050 01 04 36 S2CID 129865997 a b c d e f g Baker B H 1967 Geology of the Mount Kenya area Nairobi Geological Survey of Kenya TravelMedals 26 January 2020 Mount Kenya Summit Challenge Travel Medals Retrieved 26 May 2020 a b c d e f Gichuki Francis Ndegwa August 1999 Threats and Opportunities for Mountain Area Development in Kenya Ambio 28 5 430 435 Archived from the original subscription required on 31 December 2005 Resnick Mike 1998 Kirinyaga a fable of Utopia Ballantine p 293 ISBN 978 0 345 41701 5 a b c d e f g h i j Coe Malcolm James 1967 The Ecology of the Alpine Zone of Mount Kenya The Hague Dr W Junk a b Mount Kenya National Park Natural Forest United Nations 2008 Archived from the original on 30 December 2006 Retrieved 23 February 2008 World Heritage Nomination IUCN Technical Evaluation Mount Kenya Kenya PDF Mount Kenya National Park Archived from the original on 25 January 2010 Retrieved 30 December 2009 Biosphere Reserve Information Mount Kenya UNESCO 1998 Retrieved 6 November 2016 Waita Edwin 25 February 2021 In Kenya electric fences protect forests from human destruction Reuters New Service Mt Kenya to get electric fence to stop wildlife straying BBC News Bbc co uk 7 September 2012 Retrieved 11 September 2013 a b c d e f g h i j Kenya Wildlife Service 2006 Mount Kenya Official Guidebook Kenya Wildlife Service Mount Kenya volcano Kenya Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 14 October 2020 Ambler Charles H March 1989 The Renovation of Custom in Colonial Kenya the 1932 Generation Succession Ceremonies in Embu The Journal of African History 30 1 139 156 doi 10 1017 s0021853700030929 ISSN 0021 8537 S2CID 245928948 Ndeda Mildred A J 1 March 2019 Population movement settlement and the construction of society to the east of Lake Victoria in precolonial times the western Kenyan case Les Cahiers d Afrique de l Est The East African Review 52 83 108 doi 10 4000 eastafrica 473 ISSN 2071 7245 S2CID 198396394 Fadiman Jeffrey A 1973 Early History of the Meru of Mt Kenya The Journal of African History 14 1 9 27 doi 10 1017 S0021853700012147 ISSN 0021 8537 JSTOR 180774 S2CID 162608268 Butt B March 2010 Seasonal space time dynamics of cattle behavior and mobility among Maasai pastoralists in semi arid Kenya Journal of Arid Environments 74 3 403 413 Bibcode 2010JArEn 74 403B doi 10 1016 j jaridenv 2009 09 025 ISSN 0140 1963 a b Somjee Sultan 2000 Oral Traditions and Material Culture An East Africa Experience Research in African Literatures 31 4 97 103 doi 10 2979 RAL 2000 31 4 97 S2CID 144020233 Retrieved 21 February 2008 a b c d e Baker B H 1967 Geology of the Mount Kenya Area Geological Survey of Kenya Ministry of Natural Resources a b Gregory J W 1900 Contributions to the Geology of British East Africa Part II The Geology of Mount Kenya Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society 56 1 4 205 222 doi 10 1144 GSL JGS 1900 056 01 04 12 S2CID 219242189 a b Thomson Joseph 1968 1885 Through Masai Land 3 ed London Frank Cass amp Co Ltd ISBN 978 1 141 95717 0 a b c Gregory John Walter 1968 1896 The Great Rift Valley London Frank Cass amp Co Ltd ISBN 978 0 7146 1812 8 Speck Heinrich 1982 Soils of the Mount Kenya Area Their formation ecology and agricultural significance Mountain Research and Development 2 2 201 221 doi 10 2307 3672965 JSTOR 3672965 Mount Kenya Climbing guide Ewpnet com Archived from the original on 14 February 2008 Retrieved 11 September 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Allan Iain 1981 The Mountain Club of Kenya Guide to Mount Kenya and Kilimanjaro Nairobi Mountain Club of Kenya ISBN 978 9966 9856 0 6 Mountain Club Mountain Club of Kenya Homepage Retrieved 26 May 2007 Recession of Equatorial Glaciers A Photo Documentation Archived 14 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine Hastenrath S 2008 Sundog Publishing Madison WI ISBN 978 0 9729033 3 2 144 pp Benn Doug David Evans 1997 Glaciers and Glaciation Arnold ISBN 978 0 340 58431 6 a b Karlen Wibjorn James L Fastook Karin Holmgren Maria Malmstrom John A Matthews Eric Odada Jan Risberg Gunhild Rosqvist Per Sandgren Aldo Shemesh Lars Ove Westerberg August 1999 Glacier Fluctuations on Mount Kenya since 6000 Cal Years BP Implications for Holocene Climate Change in Africa Ambio 28 5 409 418 Archived from the original on 31 December 2005 a b Ojany Francis F 1993 Mount Kenya and its environs A review of the interaction between mountain and people in an equatorial setting Mountain Research and Development 13 3 305 309 doi 10 2307 3673659 JSTOR 3673659 a b Geological Map of the Mount Kenya Area Map 1st ed 1 125000 Geological Survey of Kenya Cartography by B H Baker Geological Survey of Kenya Edward Stanford Ltd 1966 Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 a b Mt Kenya 1 50000 Map and Guide Map 1 ed 1 50000 with 1 25000 inset Cartography by West Col Productions Andrew Wielochowski and Mark Savage 1991 ISBN 0 906227 39 9 a b Hedberg Olov 1951 Vegetation belts of East African mountains Svensk Bot Tidskr 45 140 202 a b c d Castro Alfonso Peter 1995 Facing Kirinyaga London Intermediate Technology Publications Ltd ISBN 978 1 85339 253 5 a b c Dutton E A T 1929 Kenya Mountain London Jonathan Cape a b Niemela Tuomo Pellikka Petri 2004 Zonation and characteristics of the vegetation of Mt Kenya Expedition Reports of the Department of Geography University of Helsinki Vol 40 pp 14 20 ISBN 978 952 10 2077 3 a b Hedberg Olov 1964 Features of Afroalpine Plant Ecology Acta Phytogeographica Suecica 49 1 144 a b Smith Alan P Young Truman P 1987 Tropical Alpine Plant Ecology Annual Review of Ecology and Systematics 18 137 158 doi 10 1146 annurev es 18 110187 001033 Young Truman P Peacock Mary M 1992 Giant senecios and alpine vegetation of Mount Kenya Journal of Ecology 80 1 141 148 doi 10 2307 2261071 JSTOR 2261071 a b Young Truman P Evans M E 1993 Alpine vertebrates of Mount Kenya Journal of the East African Natural History Society 82 202 154 79 Musser Guy G amp Carleton Michael D 2005 Superfamily Muroidea In Wilson Don E amp Reeder DeeAnn M eds Mammal Species of the World a taxonomic and geographic reference 3rd ed The Johns Hopkins University Press pp 894 1531 ISBN 978 0 8018 8221 0 a b Hedberg O 1969 Evolution and speciation in a tropical high mountain flora Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 1 1 2 135 148 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8312 1969 tb01816 x Henne Stephan Wolfgang Junkermann Josiah M Kariuki John Aseyo Jorg Klausen November 2008 Mount Kenya Global Atmosphere Watch Station MKN Installation and Meteorological Characterization Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology 47 11 2946 2962 Bibcode 2008JApMC 47 2946H doi 10 1175 2008JAMC1834 1 S2CID 122971010 Camberlin P Okoola R E 2003 The onset and cessation of the long rains in eastern Africa and their interannual variability Theor Appl Climatol 75 1 2 43 54 Bibcode 2003ThApC 75 43C doi 10 1007 s00704 002 0721 5 S2CID 118140053 Thompson B W 1966 The mean annual rainfall of Mount Kenya Weather 21 2 48 49 Bibcode 1966Wthr 21 48T doi 10 1002 j 1477 8696 1966 tb02813 x Spink Lieut Commander P C 1945 Further Notes on the Kibo Inner Crater and Glaciers of Kilimanjaro and Mount Kenya Geographical Journal 106 5 6 210 216 doi 10 2307 1788958 JSTOR 1788958 a b Beck Erwin Ernst Detlef Schulze Margot Senser Renate Scheibe 1984 Equilibrium freezing of leaf water and extracellular ice formation in Afroalpine giant rosette plants Planta 162 3 276 282 doi 10 1007 BF00397450 PMID 24253100 S2CID 36783645 Hastenrath Stefan 1984 The Glaciers of Equatorial East Africa Dordrecht Holland D Reidel Publishing Company ISBN 978 90 277 1572 2 Sunset amp sunrise calculator altitude not taken into account Archived from the original on 20 February 2008 Retrieved 3 June 2007 a b c d Krapf Johann Ludwig 1860 Travels Researches and Missionary Labours in Eastern Africa London Frank Cass amp Co Ltd Mackinder Halford 1900 A Journey to the Summit of Mount Kenya British East Africa The Geographical Journal 15 5 453 476 doi 10 2307 1774261 JSTOR 1774261 It was the missionary Rebmann of Mombasa who in 1848 first reported the existence of Kilimanjaro In the following year his colleague Krapf saw Kenya from Kitui a spot 90 miles southeast of the peak Krapf Johann Ludwig 13 May 1850 Extract from Krapf s diary Church Missionary Intelligencer i 345 von Hohnel Lieutenant Ludwig Teleki Count Samuel 1894 Discovery of Lakes Rudolf and Stefanie London Longmans a b c d e f g h Mackinder Halford John May 1900 A Journey to the Summit of Mount Kenya British East Africa The Geographical Journal 15 5 453 476 doi 10 2307 1774261 JSTOR 1774261 Oxford Geography s Uncomfortable History University of Oxford School of Geography and the Environment University of Oxford 22 October 2019 Retrieved 17 May 2023 a b c d e f Burns Cameron 1998 Kilimanjaro amp Mount Kenya A Climbing and Trekking Guide Leicester Cordee ISBN 978 1 871890 98 3 Benuzzi Felice 2005 1953 No Picnic on Mount Kenya A Daring Escape a Perilous Climb The Lyons Press ISBN 978 1 59228 724 6 Brandt Anthony May 2004 Extreme Classics The 100 Greatest Adventure Books of All Time National Geographic Adventure Archived from the original on 2 September 2004 Additional pages archived on 22 July 2004 Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 Page 5 Kenya Broadcasting Corporation 11 April 2007 An hero is laid to rest permanent dead link Charter aircraft crashes into Kenya s Mount Kenya Airline Industry Information 21 July 2003 Rescue teams resume efforts to recover bodies of those killed in charter aircraft crash Airline Industry Information 23 July 2003 Aircraft flown off Mount Kenya News The Times No 49451 London 23 January 1943 col C p 3 Fire devours Kenya s ancient forests Al Jazeera Retrieved 11 September 2013 Mount Kenya Online Climbing Guide Archived from the original on 14 February 2008 Retrieved 19 May 2009 Alpine Journal Vol 42 Iain Allan The Mountain Club of Kenya Guide to Mount Kenya and Kilimanjaro Nairobi Mountain Club of Kenya 1998 p107 Diamond Couloir Still Climbable Archived from the original on 19 January 2011 Retrieved 11 July 2010 a b c Mount Kenya Online Trekking Guide Archived from the original on 17 December 2007 Retrieved 19 May 2009 Castle Forest Lodge Archived from the original on 8 July 2011 Retrieved 19 May 2009 a b Fairmont Mount Kenya Safari Club Retrieved 20 April 2017 Serena Mountain Lodge PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 October 2007 Retrieved 19 May 2009 Lake Rutundu Log Cabins on Mount Kenya Archived from the original on 4 October 2007 Retrieved 19 May 2009 Reader John 1989 Mount Kenya London Elm Tree Books ISBN 978 0 241 12486 4 Krapf Johann Ludwig 13 May 1850 Extract from Krapf s diary Church Missionary Intelligencer i 452 Foottit Claire 2006 2004 Kenya The Brade Travel Guide Bradt Travel Guides Ltd ISBN 978 1 84162 066 4 B J Ratcliffe January 1943 The Spelling of Kenya Journal of the Royal African Society 42 166 42 44 JSTOR 717465 Wangari Maathai 2006 Unbowed a memoir New York Alfred A Knopf p 6 ISBN 0307263487 Kenya Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Further reading EditBenuzzi F 1953 No Picnic on Mount Kenya Lyons Press ISBN 978 1 59228 724 6 Best Nicholas 2014 Point Lenana Thistle Publishing Kindle Single de Watteville Vivienne 1935 Speak to the Earth W W Norton and Co Inc ISBN 978 0 39333 556 9 Fadiman J 1993 When We Began There Were WitchmenAn Oral History from Mount Kenya University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 08615 9 Retrieved 28 June 2011 Kenyatta J 1962 Facing Mount Kenya Vintage Press ISBN 978 0 394 70210 0 Mahaney W C 1990 Ice on the Equator Ellison Bay Wisconsin U S A Wm Caxton Ltd ISBN 978 0 940473 19 5 A full survey of the long glacial and periglacial reconstructive history of Mt Kenya its geological and environmental settings sequences of paleosols ancient soils and their significance in understanding the multiplicity of glaciations External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mount Kenya Wikiquote has quotations related to Mount Kenya Mount Kenya National Park Natural Forest UNESCO World Heritage Centre 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2011 Mount Kenya Trust Mount Kenya Trust 2006 Archived from the original on 10 May 2015 Retrieved 28 June 2011 Mt Kenya National Park Kenya Wildlife Service 2011 Archived from the original on 25 January 2010 Retrieved 28 June 2011 Mount Kenya Kenya Peakbagger com Retrieved 27 July 2013 Mount Kenya Climbing Routes 2014 Retrieved 1 October 2014 Portals Mountains Kenya Geography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mount Kenya amp oldid 1155397404, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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