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Jade Dragon Snow Mountain

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Isolation
  
141 kilometres (88 mi)

Elevation
  
5,596 m

Listing
  
Ultra-prominent peak

Parent range
  
Yùlóngxuě Shān

Province
  
Yunnan

Jade Dragon Snow Mountain wwweasytourchinacomimagesPhotojadedragonsno

Prominence
  
3,202 m (10,505 ft)  Ranked 71st

First ascent
  
1987 by Phil Peralta-Ramos and Eric Perlman

Easiest route
  
East side: snow/rock climb

Similar
  
Old Town of Lijiang, Lugu Lake, Tiger Leaping Gorge, Stone Forest, Lijiang Shuhe Ancient T

We climbed the jade dragon snow mountain yunnan lijiang china trip 2016


Jade Dragon Snow Mountain (simplified Chinese: 玉龙雪山; traditional Chinese: 玉龍雪山; pinyin: Yùlóng Xuěshān) is a mountain massif (also identified as a small mountain range) in Yulong Naxi Autonomous County, near Lijiang, in Yunnan province, southwestern China. Its highest peak is named Shanzidou (扇子陡) (5,596 m or 18,360 ft).

Contents

Map of Yulong Snow Mountain, Yulong, Lijiang, China

Yunnan climbing jade dragon snow mountain in lijiang


Other names

The range is also known as Mount Yulong after the Chinese or Mount Satseto after the Naxi name. Another translated name is Yulong Snow Mountain.

Location

The view of the massif from the gardens at the Black Dragon Pool (Heilong Tan) in Lijiang is noted as one of China's finest views, and part of Yulong Snow Mountain Scenic Area, a AAAAA-classified scenic area.

The far side of the mountain forms one side of Tiger Leaping Gorge (Hutiao Xia). The Jade Water Village is at the foot of the mountain.

Exploration history

Shanzidou has been climbed only once, on May 8, 1987, by an American expedition. The summit team comprised Phil Peralta-Ramos and Eric Perlman. They climbed snow gullies and limestone headwalls, and encountered high avalanche danger and sparse opportunities for protection. They rated the maximum technical difficulty of the rock at YDS 5.7.

The Austro-American botanist and explorer Joseph Rock spent many years living in the vicinity of Mt Satseto, and wrote about the region and the Naxi people who occupy it. An interest in Rock later drew the travel writer Bruce Chatwin to the mountain, which he wrote about in an article that appeared in the New York Times and later, retitled, in his essay collection What Am I Doing Here?. Chatwin's article inspired many subsequent travellers, including Michael Palin, to visit the region.

The mountain was featured on Episode 4 of The Amazing Race 18.

References

Jade Dragon Snow Mountain Wikipedia


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