Annapurna
Annapurna | |
---|---|
Annapurna I and South from Poon Hill | |
Elevation: | 8,091 metres (26,545 feet) Ranked 10th |
Latitude: | 28° 35′ N |
Longitude: | 83° 57′ E |
Location: | Nepal |
Range: | Himalaya |
First ascent: | 1950 by Maurice Herzog and Louis Lachenal |
Easiest route: | glacier/snow/ice climb |
Annapurna is a 55-km-long massif whose highest point, Annapurna I, stands at 8,091 m (26,538 ft), making it the 10th-highest summit in the world and one of the "eight-thousanders". Annapurna is a Sanskrit name which is translated as Goddess of the Harvests.
The Annapurna massif contains six major peaks:
Annapurna I | 8,091 m. | 26,545 ft. |
Annapurna II | 7,937 m. | 26,040 ft. |
Annapurna III | 7,555 m. | 24,786 ft. |
Annapurna IV | 7,525 m. | 24,688 ft. |
Gangapurna | 7,455 m. | 24,457 ft. |
Annapurna South | 7,219 m. | 23,684 ft. |
Annapurna I was the first 8,000 metre peak to be climbed. Maurice Herzog and Louis Lachenal, of a French expedition, reached the summit on June 3 1950.
On 3 February 1987, Jerzy Kukuczka and Artur Hajzer, a Polish climber, climbed the first ascension of a eight-thousander in winter.
External link
- Annapurna on Peakware - photos
In Hinduism, Annapurna is a goddess of fertility and agriculture and an avatar of Durgha.
Annapurna also refers to some breath-oriented techniques of meditation.