Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Mount Akaishi

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First ascent
  
1879

Prominence
  
421 m

Easiest route
  
Hiking

Elevation
  
3,120 m

Mountain range
  
Akaishi Mountains

Parent range
  
Akaishi Mountains

Mount Akaishi httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Listing
  
100 Famous Japanese Mountains

Mountain type
  
Pyramidal peak, Fault block

Similar
  
Mount Warusawa, Mount Hijiri, Mount Shiomi, Mount Aino, Mount Tekari

Mount Akaishi (赤石岳, Akaishi-dake), is a peak in the Akaishi Mountains, on the border of Shizuoka and Nagano Prefectures in central Honshū, Japan.

Contents

Map of Mount Akaishi, Tashiro, Aoi Ward, Shizuoka, Shizuoka Prefecture 428-0505, Japan

On June 1, 1964, the mountain was included within the Minami Alps National Park.

Geography

At 3,120 metres (10,240 ft), Mount Akaish is the 7th tallest peak in Japan and the 4th tallest peak in the Akaishi Mountains. The peak is located within the Minami Alps National Park.

There is a triangulation station on the summit, with a Mountain hut located below, on its southern approach. On the eastern slope is a cirque, with the trace remnants of Japan’s southernmost glacier.

At the timberline are stands of Siberian dwarf pine, above which are numerous flowering alpine plants, and the habitat for the Rock Ptarmigan.

Ascents

The first recorded ascent of Mount Akaishi was by Haruki Nashiba and Masaaki Terasawa of the Japanese Home Ministry in 1879. They were followed in July 1881 by a government survey team, which established the triangulation station. Ascent of the mountain became popular after a road was established to its base in 1886. The first westerner to ascend the mountain was the English missionary and mountaineer, Walter Weston on August 19, 1892.

In 1906, Usui Kojima of the Japan Alpine Club devoted the first issue of the club’s magazine, Sangaku, to Mount Akashi, and Usui pioneered a new route up the mountain in 1909. In the summer of 1926, the 88-year-old founder of the Ōkura zaibatsu, Okura Kihachiro, decided that he wanted to visit the highest point of his company’s holdings, and climbed Mount Akaki with the assistance of 200 porters using palanquin.

References

Mount Akaishi Wikipedia