Mandani Parbat

Mandani Parbat is a mountain of the Garhwal Himalaya in Uttarakhand India.The elevation of Mandani Parbat is 6,193 metres (20,318 ft) and its prominence is 535 metres (1,755 ft). It is joint 140th highest located entirely within the Uttrakhand. Nanda Devi, is the highest mountain in this category. It lies between Chaukhamba IV, 6,854 metres (22,487 ft) and Sumeru Parbat, 6,351 metres (20,837 ft). Its nearest higher neighbor Chaukhamba IV lies 5.5 km east. It is located 8.4 km SE of Sumeru Parbat and 6.5 km NE lies Janhukut 6,829 metres (22,405 ft).

Mandani Parbat
Highest point
Elevation6,193 m (20,318 ft)[1]
Prominence535 m (1,755 ft)[1]
Coordinates30°44′01″N 79°11′57″E
Geography
Mandani Parbat
Location in Uttarakhand
LocationUttarakhand, India
Parent rangeGarhwal Himalaya
Climbing
First ascentMeszner and Spannraft climbed Mandani Parbat, on the 20th September 1938.[2]

Climbing history

In 1938 A German Expedition to the Gangotri Glacier had many first ascent of near by peaks. On the 20th September in ten hour climb from base camp Meszner and Spannraft the two climbers reached the summit of Mandani Parbat. [2]

In 1973 a small team from Pune led by Dr G. R. Patwardhan climbed Mandani Parbat on 10 June 1973.[3]

On 18 September 1994 a team from Bengal was stopped just 100m below the summit due to a huge crevasse.[4]

Glaciers and rivers

Gangotri Glacier lies on the northern side of Mandani Parbat from the snout of Gangotri Glacier comes out Bhagirathi River one of the main tributaries of river Ganga. On the south western side lies Mandani Glacier, from there comes out Mandani river after a short run it merges with Kali Ganga at Jalmalla near Kalimath which later joins Mandakini River below Naryankoti near Gupt Kashi later it joins Alaknanda River at Rudra Prayag which ultimately joins Bhagirathi River the other main tributaries of river Ganga at Dev Prayag and became Ganga there after.[5]

Neighboring peaks

neighboring peaks of Mandani Parbat:

See also

  • List of Himalayan peaks of Uttarakhand

References

  1. "Mandani Parvat". PeakVisor. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  2. SCHWARZGRUBER, PROFESSOR RUDOLF (1939). "THE GERMAN EXPEDITION TO THE GANGOTRI GLACIER, 1938 : Himalayan Journal vol.11/11". www.himalayanclub.org. 11. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  3. Mehta, Soli S. "Triennial Report 1972-4 Indian Himalaya" (PDF). Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  4. "List of expeditions" (PDF). www.alpinejournal.org.uk. Retrieved 2020-05-16.
  5. "Devprayag | Times of India Travel". timesofindia.indiatimes.com. Retrieved 22 May 2020.
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