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Nanga Parbat: The "Killer Mountain" and Its Trail of Tragedy

From the 1895 Mummery expedition to Hermann Buhl's solo first ascent

1 นาทีในการอ่าน 172 คำ Summit Stories

Nanga Parbat: The "Killer Mountain" and Its Trail of Tragedy

Nanga Parbat earned the name "Killer Mountain" after claiming 31 lives before its first ascent. The 1934 and 1937 German expeditions ended in mass tragedy, and the mountain's conquest in 1953 by Hermann Buhl — in a solo, oxygen-free push against orders — remains one of mountaineering's most audacious achievements.

Introduction

The Name "Killer Mountain"

Early Expeditions

Mummery's 1895 Disappearance

The 1934 German Expedition — 10 Dead

The 1937 Disaster — 16 Buried in an Avalanche

The Nazi Connection

Nanga Parbat as German National Symbol

Political Pressure on Expeditions

Hermann Buhl's Solo First Ascent (1953)

The Austrian Expedition

Buhl's 41-Hour Solo Push

Standing Bivouac at 8,000 Meters

The Descent and Survival

The Rupal Face

The Highest Rock Face on Earth

Reinhold Messner's 1970 Tragedy

Nanga Parbat Today

Modern Routes and Conditions

The 2013 Base Camp Attack

Legacy and Lessons

คำศัพท์

Summit Eight-Thousander Base Camp Bivouac Acclimatization Avalanche Frostbite

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