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Grandes Jorasses

Coordinates: 45°52′08″N 6°59′17″E / 45.86889°N 6.98806°E / 45.86889; 6.98806
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Grandes Jorasses
North face of the Grandes Jorasses and the Leschaux Glacier (September 2000)
Highest point
Elevation4,208 m (13,806 ft)
Prominence852 m (2,795 ft)
ListingAlpine four-thousanders
Great north faces of the Alps
Coordinates45°52′08″N 6°59′17″E / 45.86889°N 6.98806°E / 45.86889; 6.98806
Geography
Parent rangeGraian Alps
Geology
Mountain typeGranite
Climbing
First ascentHorace Walker, Melchior Anderegg, Johann Jaun and Julien Grange, 30 June 1868
Easiest routePointe Walker, south-west face, AD-, II, 1,400 m (4,600 ft), to 45 degrees - a glacier climb

The Grandes Jorasses (French pronunciation: [ɡʁɑ̃d ʒɔʁas]; 4,208 m; 13,806 ft) is a mountain in the Mont Blanc massif, on the boundary between Haute-Savoie in France and Aosta Valley in Italy.

The first ascent of the highest peak of the mountain (Pointe Walker) was by Horace Walker with guides Melchior Anderegg, Johann Jaun and Julien Grange on 30 June 1868. The second-highest peak on the mountain (Pointe Whymper, 4,184 m; 13,727 ft) was first climbed by Edward Whymper, Christian Almer, Michel Croz and Franz Biner on 24 June 1865, using what has become the normal route of ascent and the one followed by Walker's party in 1868.

Geography

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The summits on the mountain (from east to west) are:

  • Pointe Walker (4,208 m; 13,806 ft) – named after Horace Walker, who made the first ascent of the mountain
  • Pointe Whymper (4,184 m; 13,727 ft) – named after Edward Whymper, who made the first ascent of this, the second-highest summit
  • Pointe Croz (4,110 m; 13,484 ft) – named after Michel Croz, a guide from Chamonix
  • Pointe Hélène (4,045 m; 13,271 ft) – named after Princess Elena
  • Pointe Marguerite (4,065 m; 13,337) – named after Queen Margherita
  • Pointe Young (3,996 m; 13,110 ft) – named after Geoffrey Winthrop Young

North face

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Located on the French side of the mountain, the north face is one of the three great north faces of the Alps, along with the north faces of the Eiger and the Matterhorn (known as 'the Trilogy'). One of the most famous walls in the Alps, it towers 1200 m (3,900 ft) above the Leschaux Glacier, stretching 1 km from end to end. The classic route on the face is the Walker Spur (Cassin/Esposito/Tizzoni, 1938, TD+/ED1, IV, 5c/6a, A1, 1200 m) which leads directly to the summit of Pointe Walker. The other major buttress on the mountain is the Croz Spur, which leads to the summit of Pointe Croz. In her solo ascents of the six most difficult north faces of the Alps, Alison Hargreaves chose this route in preference to the Walker Spur.

Reinhold Messner has stated, that he made the decision to ascend Mount Everest with Peter Habeler in the Grandes Jorasses, where Peter "descended like a dancer".[1]

South face

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On the Italian side of the mountain, the south face can be accessed from the Boccalatte cabin, above the hamlet of Planpincieux in the Italian Val Ferret, part of the Courmayeur municipality.

Summit ridge

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From the Col des Hirondelles, the summit ridge connects Pt. Walker to the other summit points and then descends to the Col des Grandes Jorasses where a bivouac shelter is located - the Bivouac E Canzio hut. The ridge forms the French-Italian border, almost all of which is above 4,000 m (13,000 ft).

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Reinhold Messner (2019-09-18). Mount Everest, der letzte Schritt (BR Fernsehen) (in German). 2:40 minutes in.
  • Dumler, Helmut; Willi P. Burkhardt (1994). The High Mountains of the Alps. London: Diadem.
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