2015/12/17 ⑪-1 Peak List of Garhwal E1 1 ローマ字(別称)
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2015/12/21 ⑪-1 Peak List of Garhwal E1 1 ローマ字(別称)、(参考位置)等
2015/12/21 ⑪-1 Peak List of Garhwal E1 1 ローマ字(別称)、(参考位置)等 山 インド・ヒマラヤ カタカナ表記・山名数 緯度(゜' '') 経度(゜' '') 標高(m) 標高・別 山域 参考文献・初登頂等 ROMA Card Index Photo Figure KANA(114) LAT LON ALT ALT2 AREAREF(M=三省堂山名p) Baby Shivling 441 ベビー・シヴリン 305300 790400 5395 5489 5606 GE1 93 M491 Baltoli バラルトリ 301300 794800 5275 GE1 1 M419 Bamba Dhura(Bomba)(Barfu) 〇 バンバ・ドゥラ(ボンバ)(バルフ) 302624 801711 6342 6300:6334 GE1 1 AAJ M423,HH48,1977India Bamchu 〇 486 F419 バムチユー 302656 800125 6303 GE1 1 AAJ M409 Banchu バンチユウ 304800 801100 5438 GE1 Bankatia, E 2km of Malatori 〇 バンカティア 301500 800800 5630 GE1 M419 Bati, S 8km Mangraon 〇 バティ 302600 800500 5858 GE1 1 M401 Bauljuri, W 5km of Malatori 496 F419 バラジュリ 302000 794800 5922 GE1 IMF-OP M392 Bethartoli Himal-North 〇 468 F419 ベタルトリ・ヒマール北峰 302237 794705 6352 GE1 1 AAJ M486,HH95,,1979 Bethartoli Himal-South 〇 497 P499 F419 ベタルトリ・ヒマール南峰 302204 794739 6318 GE1 AAJ M486,HH75, 1956Indo- German Bhanoti 〇 497 F419 バノッティ 300200 795300 5645 GE1 1 M406 IMF-OP Changabang 〇 485 F419 チャンガバン 302959 795537 6864 6866 GE1 1 MF-OP AAJ M311, Changuch 496 F419 チャングーチ 301742 800228 6322 GE1 1 MF-OP AAJ M311 Chepar Choti チェパル・チョティ 301300 800200 5252 GE1 1 M302 Chhalab 〇 474 F419 チャラーブ 303549 800239 6160 GE1 1 AAJ M310 D-Ⅰ 〇 ディーⅠ峰 302900 795100 6014 GE1 1 M327 D-Ⅱ 〇 ディーⅡ峰 303100 795500 6191 GE1 1 M327 Dangthal 〇 494 F419 ダンタール 301336 800600 6050 GE1 1 AAJ M298 Darcho 〇 ダルチョー 304243 801228 6145 GE1 93 AAJ M295 Deo Damla 〇 485 F419 デオ・ダムラ 302942 800116 6620 6635 GE1 1 AAJ M336, 1936 UK Devi Mukut 〇 デヴィ・ムクット 301800 795700 -
National Ganga River Basin Authority (Ngrba)
NATIONAL GANGA RIVER BASIN AUTHORITY (NGRBA) Public Disclosure Authorized (Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India) Public Disclosure Authorized Environmental and Social Management Framework (ESMF) Public Disclosure Authorized Volume I - Environmental and Social Analysis March 2011 Prepared by Public Disclosure Authorized The Energy and Resources Institute New Delhi i Table of Contents Executive Summary List of Tables ............................................................................................................... iv Chapter 1 National Ganga River Basin Project ....................................................... 6 1.1 Introduction .................................................................................................. 6 1.2 Ganga Clean up Initiatives ........................................................................... 6 1.3 The Ganga River Basin Project.................................................................... 7 1.4 Project Components ..................................................................................... 8 1.4.1.1 Objective ...................................................................................................... 8 1.4.1.2 Sub Component A: NGRBA Operationalization & Program Management 9 1.4.1.3 Sub component B: Technical Assistance for ULB Service Provider .......... 9 1.4.1.4 Sub-component C: Technical Assistance for Environmental Regulator ... 10 1.4.2.1 Objective ................................................................................................... -
(A) Revised Fee Structure Is Applicable for the Climbing Season 2020 Only
ANNEXURE REDUCTION/DISCOUNTS ON PEAK FEE TO OTHERS FOR LESS CLIMBED PEAKS Height of Peak Existing Peak Fee ProposeD peak Fee for the Climbing Season 2020 Below 6500 M (1) US$ 500 for party of two 1) US$ 250 for party of two members. members. (List of peaks attacheD AppenDix “A”) (2) For additional members upto (2) For additional members twelve, US$ 225 each. upto twelve, US$ 110 each. 6501 M to 7000 M (1) US$ 700 for party of two (1) US$ 350 for party of two members. members. (List of Peaks attacheD AppenDix “B”) (2) For additional members upto (2) For additional members upto twelve, US$ 325 each. twelve, US$ 165 each. 7001 M anD above (1) US$ 1000 for party of two (1) US$ 500 for party of two members. members. (List of Peaks attacheD AppenDix “C”) (2) For additional members upto (2) For additional members upto twelve, US$ 450 each. twelve, US$ 225 each. Trekking Peaks (List of (1) US$ 100 for party of two (1) US$ 100 for party of two peak AppenDix “D”) members. members. (2) For additional members upto (2) For additional members upto twelve, US$ 50 each twelve, US$ 50 each Note : (a) Revised fee structure is applicable for the climbing season 2020 only. (b) There is no change in other terms and conditions applicable. Appendix “A” PEAKS BELOW 6500 M IN OPEN AREA J&K S.NO. Name of peak Height Longitude Latitude Remarks 1. Bobang 5971 M 76° 08’ 33° 25’ Leh-Harpass-Kijai Nala- Nagdal Lake-C-I-CII Summit Attempt 2. -
Initial Environmental Examination IND:Uttarakhand Emergency
Initial Environmental Examination Project Number: 47229-001 December 2014 IND: Uttarakhand Emergency Assistance Project Submitted by Uttarakhand Emergency Assistance Project (Roads & Bridges), Government of Uttarakhand, Dehardun This report has been submitted to ADB by the Program Implementation Unit, Uttarkhand Emergency Assistance Project (R&B), Government of Uttarakhand, Dehradun and is made publicly available in accordance with ADB’s public communications policy (2011). It does not necessarily reflect the views of ADB. Initial Environmental Examination October 2014 India: Uttarakhand Emergency Assistance Project Restoration Work of following Motor Roads in Chamoli District under UEAP: (1) Karanprayag-Nauti-Paithani Motor Road (2) Karanprayag Nainisen Motor Road (3) Gauchar-Sidholi Motor Road (4) Birhi-Gauna Motor Road (5) Pokhri-Gopeshwer Motor Road Prepared by State Disaster Management Authority, Government of Uttarakhand, for the Asian Development Bank. i ABBREVIATIONS ADB - Asian Development Bank ASI - Archaeological Survey of India BOQ - Bill of Quantity CTE - Consent to Establish CTO - Consent to Operate DFO - Divisional Forest Officer DSC - Design and Supervision Consultancy DOT - Department of Tourism CPCB - Central Pollution Control Board EA - Executing Agency EAC - Expert Appraisal Committee EARF - Environment Assessment and Review Framework EC - Environmental Clearance EIA - Environmental Impact Assessment EMMP - Environment Management and Monitoring Plan EMP - Environment Management Plan GMVN - Garhwal Mandal Vikas Nigam -
Pindari & Kafni Glacier
Pindari & Kafni Glacier Trek Location Kumaon Himalaya, Uttarakhand Area Bageshwar Grade of trek Moderate Co-ordinates 30°14'57"N 80°4'21"E Max. Altitude 3900 m Season mid May - September Duration 10 days The most easily accessible glacier in the Kumaon region, the Pindari Glacier has a beauty of its own. Situated between the snow-capped Nanda Devi and Nanda Kot Mountains, Pindari is a big and steep glacier measuring 3km in length and 0.25km in breadth. River Pindar originates from this Glacier and flows down to confluence into the river Alaknanda. The trekking route to the glacier traverses along the southern wilderness of the Nanda Devi Sanctuary offering some beautiful views of peaks like Panwali Dwar (6683m) and Maiktoli (6803m). A trek to the Pindari Glacier is a "soft adventure" experience and well within the capacity of any trekker who is amply rewarded by the magnificence and grandeur of the towering Himalayas. Trek Itinerary Day 00: Overnight train from Delhi to Kathgodam Day 01 : KATHGODAM - travel to SONG-LOHARKHET (1750 m),6-7 hrs. Our jeep is ready to take us further deep into mountains. Overnight at Rest house. Day 2: LOHARKHET - DHAKURI (2680 M) 11kms It is an 11 km trek today that takes you down into the depths of the valley and then a fair climb to Dhakuri. Overnight is tents. Day 3: DHAKURI - KHATI (2210 M ) 8 kms Trek to Khati, the largest village on this route and is on the banks of the Pindar Ganga. Overnight in Tents / Village huts. Day 4: KHATI - DWALI (2575 M) 11kms (5-6hrs) The trek with the roar of the Pindar Ganga not too far off. -
Glaciers Responses to Changing Climatic Conditions in Nanda Devi Region, Central Himalaya, India
Glaciers responses to changing climatic conditions in Nanda Devi region, central Himalaya, India Suraj Mal and RB Singh Department of Geography, Shaheed Bhagat Singh College, University of Delhi, India Global Mean Specific and Total Mass Balance of Glaciers and Ice Caps Periods Mean specific Mass Total Mass Balance (kg m-2 yr-1) Balance (Gt yr-1) 1960/1961– –283 ± 102 –155 ± 55 2003/2004 1960/1961– –219 ± 92 –120 ± 50 1989/1990 1990/1991– –420 ± 121 –230 ± 66 2003/2004 Source: IPCC, 2007 1 Gt = one billion metric tonnes One metric tonne is 1000 kilograms Countries No of Area of Glaciers Ice Volume Glaciers (km2) (km3) Bhutan1 667 1316.71 127.25 India2* 4278 8797.13 931.56 Nepal3 3252 5323.90 481.32 China4** 1578 2906.08 -- Pakistan5 5218 15040.70 2738.51 Total 14993 33384.46 4278.64 Source: Mool et al., 20011; Sah et al., 20052; Mool and Bajracharya, 20032; Bhagat et al., 20042; Mool et al., 20013; Lizong et al., 20054; Mool et al., 20055. *Only Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Sikkim are included. **Only Tibten Parts of China are included. Snout Recession of Himalayan Glaciers Glaciers Location Period Average snout retreat (m/year) References Siachen Siachen NA 31.5 Vohra, 1981 1995-2008 > 1 Ganjoo and Kaul, 2009 Milam* Uttarakhand 1849-1906 12.8 Cotter and Brown, 1907 1906-1938 16 Mason, 1938 1938-1957 5.6 Jangpangi and Vohra, 1959 1957-1966 20.2 Jangpangi, 1975 1966-1997 30.3 Shukla and Siddiqui, 2001 1954-1976 20 Raj, 2011 1976-1990 19.14 1990-2006 36.93 Pindari* Uttarakhand 1845-1966 23.5 Tiwari, 1972 Chorabari Uttarakhand 1962-2003 -
Bagini Glacier Trek Changabang Base Camp
BAGINI GLACIER TREK CHANGABANG BASE CAMP 7 OCTOBER - 14 OCTOBER 2017 OVERVIEW Imagine hiking in a Himalayan field with the grandiose views of Himalayan peaks like Kalanka, Changabang, Hardeol, Rishi, Trishuli, Hathi, Satminal, Garur and Dunagiri, feeling the oneness with the Himalaya while musing about the lines "Wind in my hair, I feel part of everywhere! " Bagini Glacier trek passes through some of the most majestic himalayan highlands winding through few of the most intriguing Garhwali villages. The Trek takes you to the base of Changabang - The Shining Mountain, also the title of the book by Peter Boardman considered one of the best Mountain Literature Classics. The book is based on Boardman's and Joe Tasker's successful summit of Changabang difficult west wall in 1976 Standing at an elevation of 6,864m, Changabang was first climbed on the 4th June 1974 , in an Expedition led by Lt. Col Balwant Sandhu and Chris Bonington Himalayan Peaks Visible Kalanka (6,931m) Changabang (6,864m) Hardeol (7,151m) Rishi ( 6,992m) 7 OCT - 14 OCT 2017 Tirsuli (7,074m) Hathi (6,727m) Satminal (6,911m) Dunagiri (7,066m) ITINERARY 7 OCT - 14 OCT 2017 Day1: Haridwar to Joshimath (In Taxi) Day2: Joshimath to Jumma (in Taxi) Walk to Ruing Village (2800m) [3kms Walk] Day3: Ruing to Dronagiri village (3610m) [8kms Walk] Day4: Dronagiri to Lower/Advanced Bagini base camp (4200m) [11 kms Walk ] Day5: Bagini base camp to Bagini Glacier/ChangabangBC back to Bagini Base camp (4500m) [11 kms walk] Day6: Bagini base camp to Dronagiri [8kms walk] Day7: Dronagiri to Jumma [3 kms Walk], Jumma to Joshimath (Taxi) Day 8: Joshimath to Haridwar Overview Key Attractions Region : Uttarakhand Joshimath Duration: 8 Days Dronagiri Difficulty: Moderate Ruing, Jumma Max Altitude: 4500m Bagini Base Camp Approx Trekking Km Changabang in 6 days: 43 Kms Bagini Glacier HOW TO GET THERE? 7 OCT - 14 OCT 2017 We arrange transport for you to get from Haridwar to Joshimath and back. -
Australian Mountaineering in the Great Ranges of Asia, 1922–1990
19 Turkeys on ice Jon Muir is one of those people who can truly be described as unforgettable. Red-haired and freckle-faced, he possesses a zany sense of humour, an inexhaustible amount of energy and an unbounded zest for life that never fail to impress people on meeting him. Sorrel Wilby, in her book Beyond the Icefall, described Muir as ‘by far the most interesting guy on the [Australian Bicentennial Everest Expedition] team; irreverent, crazy, uninhibited, good humoured and so intense his eyes were permanently popping out of their freckled sockets’.1 Muir’s Australian Bicentennial Everest Expedition (ABEE) colleague Jim Truscott, in recounting a satirical book review of a mythical volume on the expedition, included a chapter entitled ‘Am I normal— the Ozymandias story (Readers—judge this catalogue of Jon Muir’s weirdness for yourselves)’.2 It is his wild sense of humour, however, that is probably the most prominent trait in Muir’s character. Wilby recalls being kept awake one night during the walk in to the ABEE base camp by ‘Jon’s manic laughter, ringing out from the adjoining room’,3 and, at another point when he led the response to his own joke, ‘even his freckles started shaking with laughter’.4 She concluded, even before the ABEE team had arrived in Kathmandu, that Muir was ‘ready for a strait-jacket—not a climbing harness’.5 1 Wilby, S. 1989, Beyond the Icefall, Childs & Associates, Sydney, ch. 2. 2 Truscott, J. 1989, ‘Satirical book review’, AAA Newsletter, no. 3/89, p. 9. 3 Wilby, Beyond the Icefall, ch. -
Saf Mina! N Orth..West Face
IAN PARNELL Saf Mina! N orth..west Face tried to time my bouts of shivering with those of the form crushed next I to me. I doubted that its Gore-Tex clad bulk could actually be sleeping but, just in case it had managed a brief moment of escape, how cruel to wrench it back to this cold dark place. Maybe if I could just find a glimmer of comfort I too might step sideways from the refrigerator into a warm golden room... I shifted my hips to release a blood-starved limb... the room would be filled with heat radiating from a huge fire ... my arm was coming back to life and I could now wiggle the fmgers in front of the fire she was there welcoming me down onto the soft rug I moved my arm round and pulled close to snuggle up. 'Dude!' John's voice dragged me back to reality, the golden fire was gone and I was back in our tiny frozen tent five days up Saf Minal's north-west face. 'You know what you need?' She was gone too. And in her place I was squeezing my irate climbing partner closer to me. 'You need a girlfriend. Big time!' It's a popular theory that today's self-styled tiber-mountaineers are merely emotionally retarded lonely men still playing at being boys. And that the attentions of a good woman would deflect their misguided energies back to normality. But such simple theories always have flaws. Take John Varco, the rather disturbed American alpinist I was now mistakenly clutching in my arms in search of solace. -
Nanda Devi : the 'Bliss Giving' Goddess of Kumaun
1 NANDA DEVI : THE ‘BLISS GIVING’ GODDESS OF KUMAUN Mountains, like men, have their history. They too are born, grow, decay and die. One cannot claim that, like men, they love, but it is true - and how true – that they are loved. Felice Benuzzi, No Picnic on Mount Kenya The twin peaks of Nanda Devi (7,816 m) and Nanda Devi East (7,434 m) of Kumaun stand majestically in the centre of a ring of mountains, distinct and beautiful, particularly as the first and the last rays of the sun caress their summits. Hugh Ruttledge, a British explorer, after his attempt to find a route to these peaks in 1932, described the Nanda Devi Sanctuary in a letter to The Times, London: “A seventy- mile barrier ring on which stand twelve measured peaks of over 21,000 ft, which has no depression lower than 17,000 ft except in the west where the Rishi Ganga rising at the foot of Nanda Devi draining the area of some 250 square miles (800 square kilometres) of snow and ice has earned for itself what must be one of the most terrific gorges in the world.” Without the Sanctuary and its wall of high peaks to absorb the main thrust of the icy Tibetan winds, the Gangetic plains, the granary of India, would have been stripped barren. History In 1883, in one of the first attempts to reach the inner sanctuary, W W Graham, a British traveller, tried to forge a way through the Rishi Ganga gorge, failing to make much headway. -
OTES-AFRI a 15 Hours with One Bivouac (ED(In
OTES-AFRI A 102 New route 011 MOl/lit Kenya (Photo: DOllg Seotl) 15 hours with one bivouac (ED(in£), HVS). They later climbed the Diamond Couloir via the headwall, and continued to the Gatc of Mists and on to Batian, descending by elion and the Shipton Route in 14 hours. The Oilier Couloir was climbed (grade V) for the first time by Phil Snyder and Rob Collister. On the N Face, the NE Buttress was climbed in its entirety (grade Vsup) by lan Howell, Phil SnyJer and lain Alien. Another new climb was the Diamond Buttress Route (grade VI) by lan Howell and John Temple on the S Face; they also climbed for the first time the ESE Face of Nelion (grade VI). Climbers have also bcen busy in the Ruwenzori, at Hell's Gate Gorge and on Mount Mulanje (3001 m), Malawi's highest mountain, and several new routes have resulted; details are given in Mountain 4712 and 50 11. SOUTH AFRICA We are indebted to Michael Scott who has provided us with an Events and Trends revicw of climbing in South Africa which appears on p 227. ASIA The trend towards lightweight expeditions, exemplified by ascents such as Messner and Habeler's of Hidden Pcak and Tasker and Renshaw's of Dunagiri in 1975 has been re inforced this season. Some outstanding climbs have resulted-the ascent of the W face of Changabang by Peter Boardman and Joe Tasker represents one of the more spectacular of these. The previous relaxation of restrictions in the Karakoram and in Garhwal is resulting in 236 NOTES-ASIA an increased number of parties in both areas; the Japanese have been particularly active in thc former and have recorded many first ascents. -
Indian Himalaya Soli S. Mehta
Triennial Report 1972-4 Indian Himalaya Soli S. Mehta If evidence was required to prove that fantastic Alpine techniques have come to the Himalaya in a big way, a review of the targets and their style of ascents by compact and efficient teams of the last few years would serve admirably. Not much longer will we have the dull plod up endless snow-slopes-the numerous camps-the siege tactics. True, they are unlikely to disappear altogether but they should be all but swamped by the tide of Grade V-VI routes that are now being opened up both in the Indian Himalaya as well as in Nepal. It almost seems as if Denis Gray's article in a recent issue of the Alpine Journal on Himalayan Ethic has been taken seriously! This review is not chronological-I need the freedom to highlight those factors that would be lost in a purely chronological geographical treatment of events. Firstly then the major problems-Saser Kangri (7672 m) and Changabang (6864 m). Nobody who has followed the progress of Himalayan peak-bagging could have failed to note the importance of these summits which had defied strong challenges in the past. Saser particularly has severe problems of approach. The more ob- vious route appears to be from the SW. but having beaten all previous attempts from this direction, the Indo Tibet Border Police expedition led by Commander Joginder Singh tried the longer and more precipitous route from the Nand E in the spring of 1973. The several crossings of the mighty Shyok river were enough to slow down progress before and all but maroon the party after the ascent.