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The
Himalayas are a great mountain range formed by the collision of
Indo- Pakistan tectonic plate with the Asian Continent. The central
Himalayan mountains are situated in Nepal, while the eastern
mountains extend to the borders of Bhutan and Sikkim. Nanga Parbat
massif is the western corner pillar of the Himalayas. It is an
isolated range of peaks just springing up from nothing, and is
surrounded by the rivers Indus and Astore. Nanga Parbat or "Nanga
Parvata" means the naked mountain. Its original and appropriate
name, however, is Diamir the king of mountains.
Nanga Parbat (main peak) has a height of
8,126m/26,660 ft. It has three vast faces. The Rakhiot (Ra Kot) face
is dominated by the north and south silver crags and silver plateau;
the Diamir face is rocky in the beginning. It converts itself into
ice fields around Nanga Parbat peak. The
Rupal face is the highest precipice in the world. Reinhold Messner,
a living legend in mountaineering from Italy, says that "every one
who has ever stood at the foot of this face (4,500m/14,764ft) up
above the 'Tap Alpe', studied it or flown over it, could not help
the amazement of its sheer size; it has become known as the highest
rock and ice wall in the world!". Nanga Parbat has always been
associated with tragedies and tribulations until it was climbed in
1953. A lot of mountaineers have perished on Nanga Parbat since
1895. Even today it is claiming a heavy toll of human lives,
mountaineers in search of adventure and thrill, and in finding new
and absolutely un-climbed routes are becoming its victims.
It
was in 1841 that a huge rock-slide from the Nanga Parbat dammed the
Indus river. This created a huge lake, 55 km long, like the present
Tarbela lake down-stream. The flood water that was released when the
dam broke caused a rise of 80 ft in the river's 3 level at Attock
and swept away an entire Sikh army. It was also in the middle of the
nineteenth century that similar catastrophes were later caused by
the damming of Hunza and Shyok rivers.
The Nanga Parbat peak was discovered in the
nineteenth century by Europeans. The Schlagintweit brothers, who
hailed from Munich (Germany) came in 1854 to Himalayas and drew a
panoramic view which is the first known picture of Nanga Parbat. In
1857 one of them was murdered in Kashgar. The curse of Nanga Parbat
had begun!
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