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Shisha Pangma (earlier name Gosainthan, Chinese Xixabangma, 8027 m) is the fourteenth highest mountain on our planet. Subsidiary 8000 m-peak: Shisha Pangma Central-Peak (8008 m) Tables
All ascents to date here Routes statistics Nations statistics Fatalities table
Nowadays there are difficulties to know all ascents of the Central-Peak. The table shows all ascents known today, but there must be several more. Some ascents are known, but not the names of the climbers. Maybe there are even some who ascended the Main-Peak and are included in the Central-Peak list, because the route is not known. If anybody is missing especially on this list or is wrongly included here and should be on the Main-Peak list, please send us the route details and the lists will be corrected.
All known ascents of the Central-Peak.
Geographical facts: see General Info – 8000ers
From South

From North
 There were two ascents on Shisha Pangma, that were finally cleared not long ago. The first one is the third ascent of the mountain in autumn 1980 by Austrian climbers. It was not known before that they already did a new route back then. It was just published in a local Alpine Club magazine, but nowhere else!
The route sketch drawn by an expedition member

They were the first climbers who traversed from the North ridge that leads to the Central-Peak, across a large part of the North face along the upper NE Ridge to the Main-Peak. Many years later there were two different variations of this route.
The second cleared ascent was a misunderstanding. Nives Meroi and her husband Romano Benet were noted for a long time as having climbed only the Central-Peak. In an interview not long ago it was not cleared properly. After a long and patient email conversation with Nives, where she finally draw the line of ascent on an older sketch it was cleared, that they made a slight variant to the Chinese traverse across a minor point on the ridge, that was not mentioned before in climbing history and they named this minor point “Cima Centrale”. Well, it is the central point on the ridge between the Central- and the Main-Peak and this was the reason of the misunderstanding!
The route sketch with the drawing from Nives Meroi

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