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词条 Apsarasas Kangri
释义

  1. References

{{Infobox mountain
| name = Apsarasas Kangri
| photo =
| photo_caption =
| elevation_m = 7245
| elevation_ref = [1]
Ranked 96th
| prominence_m = 625
| prominence_ref = [1][2]
| parent_peak = Teram Kangri
| listing =
| location = China border with the Siachen Glacier region (controlled by India, claimed by Pakistan) [1][3]
| range = Siachen Muztagh, Karakoram
| map = Tibetan Plateau
| map_caption = Location on a map of the Tibetan Plateau
| map_size =
| label_position =
| coordinates = {{coord|35|32|18|N|77|08|54|E|type:mountain_scale:100000|format=dms|display=inline,title}}
| coordinates_ref = [1]
| first_ascent = 1976
| easiest_route = snow/ice climb
}}

Apsarasas Kangri is a mountain in the Siachen Karakoram range. With an elevation of {{convert|7245|m|ft|abbr=on}} it is the 96th highest mountain in the world. Apsarasas Kangri is located on the border between Xinjiang, China and the Siachen Glacier region, controlled by India and claimed by Pakistan.

Apsarasas was named by Grant Peterkin of the 1908 Workman expedition, from apsara ("fairies") and sas ("place"), thus "place of the fairies".[4] There are at least three main summits of near-equal height, usually labeled I to III from west to east over a distance of 5 km. The eastern summit ({{coord|35|31|14|N|77|11|56|E}}) is separated from the other two by a saddle just over 6800 m high.

Only the western peak (Apsaras I) appears to have been climbed. The first ascent was made over the west ridge by Yoshio Inagaki, Katsuhisa Yabuta and Takamasa Miyomoto of the Osaka University Mountaineering Club on August 7, 1976.[5] The second ascent was by an Indian Army expedition on September 18, 1980,[6] and another Indian army team achieved the third ascent in 1988.[7] Apsaras II and Apsaras III are listed as "virgin peaks" by the Indian Mountaineering Foundation[3] and the eastern summit counts amongst the highest unclimbed peaks.

References

1. ^{{cite peakbagger|pid=18666|title=Apsarasas, India/China|accessdate=2015-02-17}}
2. ^Note: Sources vary on the prominence of this peak. 8000ers.com states 607m and Global.mongabay {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130702193311/http://global.mongabay.com/geography/Apsarasas_Kangri.html |date=July 2, 2013 }} states 635m. Both agree with the Peakbagger summit elevation of 7245m, but 8000ers.com purports that the unclimbed eastern peak is the highest summit.
3. ^{{cite web|title=Virgin Peaks in East Karakoram|url=http://www.indianmountaineeringfoundation.com/virginpeakseastkarakoram.html|publisher=The Indian Mountaineering Foundation (IMF)|accessdate=17 February 2015}}
4. ^{{cite book|last=Kapadia|first=Harish|authorlink=Harish Kapadia|title=High Himalaya Unknown Valleys|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=KNhJXSjSk70C&pg=PA14|date=1 March 2002|publisher=Indus Publishing|isbn=978-81-7387-117-7|page=314}}
5. ^Hideo Misawa, Apsaras, American Alpine Journal 21, 1977 p. 271
6. ^Brig K. N. Thadani, [https://www.himalayanclub.org/hj/38/19/the-ascent-of-apsarasas-i-in-the-karakoram/ The Ascent of Apsarasas I in the Karakoram], Himalayan Journal 38, 1982.
7. ^Kapadia, 2002, [https://books.google.com/books?id=KNhJXSjSk70C&pg=PA302 p. 302].
{{JammuKashmir-geo-stub}}{{Xinjiang-geo-stub}}

3 : Mountains of Xinjiang|Seven-thousanders of the Karakoram|Mountains of Jammu and Kashmir

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