Kongur Tiube
| Kongur Tiube | |
|---|---|
| 公格尔九别峰 | |
Kongur Tiube (Kongur Tagh II peak) | |
| Highest point | |
| Elevation | 7,530 m (24,700 ft)[1] Ranked 46th |
| Prominence | 810 m (2,660 ft)[1] |
| Coordinates | 38°35′37″N 75°11′44″E / 38.59361°N 75.19556°E |
| Geography | |
| Location | Akto County, Xinjiang, China |
| Parent range | Pamir Mountains |
| Climbing | |
| First ascent | Kirill Kuzmin and others, August 1956 |
| Easiest route | Rock/snow/ice climb |
Kongur Tagh, which means "a brown mountain" in Uyghur language, has a significant subpeak known as Kongur Tiube (公格尔九别峰 which means in the local language "the mountain with a white cap",[2] also Kongur Tiubie / Jiubie and Kungur Tjube Tagh), 38°36′57″N 75°11′44″E / 38.61583°N 75.19556°E; elevation = 7,530 metres (24,700 ft).Ranked 46th[3] It is moderately independent, with a topographic prominence of 840 m (2,760 ft).
In 1956 Evgeny Andrianovich Beletsky led a large expedition of Soviet and Chinese climbers to Xinjiang. After successsfully making the first ascent of Muztagh Ata a smaller group, led by Kirill Kuzmin set out to make the first ascent of Kongur Tiube. On 16 August Kuzmin reached the summit, accompanied by five other Soviet mountaineers and two Chinese mountaineers.[4]
In 2015, Chinese state media reported about a huge body of the Kongur Tiube glacier collapsing causing a 20 km long and one kilometre wide ice rock avalanche.[5]
See also
References
- ^ a b "Kongur Tiube Tagh, China". Peakbagger.com. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
- ^ Kongur Jiubie Peak Archived 2013-12-15 at the Wayback Machine (in Chinese)
- ^ Kongur Tagh-Muztagh Ata Topographic Map, 1:100,000, by the Lanzhou Institute of Glaciology and Geocryology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, ISBN 7-80545-148-6.
- ^ Beletsky, E. A. (1958). "В ГОРАХ ЗАПАДНОГО КИТАЯ (In the Mountains of Western China)". ИЗВЕСТИЯ ВСЕСОЮЗНОГО ГЕОГРАФИЧЕСКОГО ОБЩЕСТВА (News of the All-Union Geographical Society) (in Russian). 90 (1): 14–24. Retrieved 23 December 2025.
- ^ Petley, Dave (2015-05-17). "Reports of a massive ice - rock avalanche in Akto County, Xinjiang, China?". Retrieved 2024-11-23.
- Sources
- Ward, Michael (July 1983). "The Kongur Massif in Southern Sinkiang". The Geographical Journal. 149 (2): 137–152. doi:10.2307/633599.