Bojohagur Duanasir

Bojohagur or Bojohaghur Duanasir (Urdu: بوجوہاگور) is a summit in the Batura Muztagh, a subrange of the Karakoram range in Pakistan. It is the west summit of a short ridge whose high point is Ultar Sar, also known as Bojohaghur Duanasir II (despite being higher). It was first climbed in 1984 by E. Kisa, M. Nagoshi, and R. Okamoto, members of a Japanese expedition led by Tsumeo Omae, which ascended from the Hasanabad Glacier via the Southwest Ridge

Bojohagur Duanasir
بوجوہاگور
Bojohagur Duanasir (left foreground) viewed from the southeast, with Ultar Sar (center foreground) and Shispare (center background).
Highest point
Elevation7,329 m (24,045 ft)
Prominence< 300 metres (984 ft)
ListingList of mountains in Pakistan
Coordinates36°23′59″N 74°41′31″E[1]
Geography
Bojohagur Duanasir
بوجوہاگور
Location in Pakistan
LocationHunza Valley, Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan
Parent rangeKarakoram, Batura
Climbing
First ascent1984, by a Hiroshima Alpine Club(Japan)

Location

It lies about 10 km (6.2 mi) northeast of the Karimabad, a town on the Karakoram Highway in the Hunza Valley, part of the Gilgit district of Gilgit-Baltistan.

Nearby summits and glaciers

To the northwest of the Bojohaghur/Ultar massif is the huge pyramid of Shispare (7,611 m/24,970 ft). Along the southwest ridge of the massif are Hunza Peak and the striking rock spire of Bublimotin (Ladyfinger Peak). The glaciers draining the slopes of the massif are (clockwise from north): the Ghulkin Glacier, the Gulmit Glacier, the Ahmad Abad Glacier, the Ultar Glacier, and the Hasanabad Glacier. (Many of these have other names as well.)

gollark: Votaciously!
gollark: There are some which do, but they have different constraints.
gollark: Nope.
gollark: Ranked voting systems are subject to the horrors of Arrow's impossibility theorem.
gollark: Do vote gollark. Maybe vote palaiologos.

See also

  • Highest Mountains of the World

Notes

  1. ^ These are the coordinates of the Ultar peak.

References

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.