Noshak

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Noshak
The Noshak (left with a cloud cover) with its west ridge from the base camp (Noshak valley in Afghanistan) from west northwest

The Noshak (left with a cloud cover) with its west ridge from the base camp (Noshak valley in Afghanistan) from west northwest

height 7485  m
location Badachschan ( Afghanistan ),
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa ( Pakistan )
Mountains Hindu Kush
Dominance 18.89 km →  Tirich Mir West II
Notch height 2017 m ↓  ( 5468  m )
Coordinates 36 ° 25 '57 "  N , 71 ° 49' 45"  E Coordinates: 36 ° 25 '57 "  N , 71 ° 49' 45"  E
Noshak (Afghanistan)
Noshak
First ascent August 17, 1960 by Toshiaki Sakai, Goro Iwatsuboa
Normal way glaciated alpine tour
pd5

The Noshak (or Noshaq ; Persian نوشاخ; Pashtun نوشک) is the second highest peak in the Hindu Kush Mountains after Tirich Mir . It lies on the border of Afghanistan to Pakistan , between the Wakhankorridor and Chitral -Tal.

Ascent history

The first ascent was made on August 17, 1960 by Toshiaki Sakai and Goro Iwatsuboa, members of a Japanese expedition. The ascent at that time ran from the southeast over the Qadzi Deh glacier . Ten days later, on August 27, 1960, a Polish expedition reached the summit. Today's normal route, however, leads through the Noshak Valley in Afghanistan from the west to the summit.

In 1970 the Tyrolean Hindu Kush ski expedition of the Academic Alpine Club Innsbruck skied the Noshak for the first time. The expedition members included Roland Schulz, Hans-Jörg Moser, Uli Schwabe, Karl Gabl , Gerd Gantner, Jörg Schmidl and Gerhard Markl. Five of the expedition participants reached the summit. Only Jörg Schmidl (because of severe meningitis ) and Gerd Gantner (because of altitude sickness at 6900  m ) had to give up prematurely. At that time, the expedition set a new altitude record on skis.

The first ascent by Afghans was in July 2009, and in August 2018 Hanifa Yousoufi became the first Afghan woman to reach the summit.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Japanese Himalay Expeditions . American Alpine Journal, 1961, vol. 12.
  2. ^ Asia, Afghanistan, Polish Hindu Kush Expedition . American Alpine Journal, 1961, vol. 12.
  3. Interview with Dr. Karl "Charly" Gabl. January 22, 2011, accessed September 4, 2011 .