Carihuairazo

Carihuairazo

Carihuayrazo left of bigger Chimborazo as seen from the north
Highest point
Elevation 5,018 m (16,463 ft)
Prominence 620 metres (2,030 ft)
Coordinates 01°24′25″S 78°45′00″W / 1.40694°S 78.75000°W / -1.40694; -78.75000Coordinates: 01°24′25″S 78°45′00″W / 1.40694°S 78.75000°W / -1.40694; -78.75000
Geography
Carihuairazo
Parent range Andes, Cordillera Occidental
Topo map IGM, CT-ÑIV-C1
Geology
Age of rock Paleogene (Gomez 1994)
Mountain type Caldera
Last eruption Unknown
Climbing
First ascent 1951 A. Eichler, H.L. Uribe, J. Morawiecki
Easiest route glacier/snow/rock climb AD

Mount Carihuairazo (also Carihuayrazo) is a volcanic caldera neighboured by Ecuador's highest mountain Chimborazo.

Geography

Location

Carihuairazo is located in the Cordillera Occidental of the Andes of central Ecuador, 150 km (93 mi) south-southwest of the capital Quito. Its neighboured by 6,310 m high Chimborazo. The nearest cities are Riobamba (~30 km to the southeast), Ambato (~30 km to the northeast) and Guaranda (~30 km to the southwest). Carihuairazo's 1.5 km wide heavy eroded caldera opens to the east.

The Carihuairazo forms part of the "Reserva de Produccion Faunistica Chimborazo" which forms a protected ecosystem to preserve the habitat for the andens native camelids Vicuña, Llama and Alpaca.

Glacier

Carihuairazo's Glacier lost almost all of its mass during the last decade as a result of global warming and ash covers caused by the recent volcanic activity[1] of its eastern neighbour Tungurahua. At current rate Carihuairazo's Glacier is expected to completely disappear between 2020 and 2030.[2]

Volcanism

Carihuairazo must have been a Volcano of similar dimensions to its neighbour Chimborazo before explosions during the last period of activity destroyed the mass of the peak, leaving today's caldera. There is no evidence of historic activity and Carihuayrazo is considered inactive.

History

Etymology

An interpretation of its name is that it's a combination of the Quichua words Cari (man), huay (wind) and razu (Ice/Snow) (Schmudlach 2001). Local Indian mythology narrates that Carihuairazo and El Altar which are both volcanic calderas have been destroyed by Taita (Father) Chimborazo fighting for the grace of Mamá Tungurahua.

First Ascent

Carihuayrazo was climbed by Edward Whymper and the brothers Louis and Jean-Antoine Carrel during their 1880 Ecuador expedition. It is not entirely clear out of Whymper's descriptions but it is believed that they climbed the Mocha (4,960m) and not the Maxima summit (5,018m). The first ascent to the Maxima summit is attributed to Arturo Eichler,[3] Horacio Lopez Uribe and Jean Morawiecki[4] in 1951 (Neate 1994).

Climbing

Due to the glacier retreat and its consequences climbing Carihuairazo has shifted from a PD glacier route with some rock scrambling to an AD route with a technical climb to the summit tower (Maxima, 5,018m).


Routes

The normal route to Carihuairazo Maxima (5,018m) starts from a camping spot at ~4,600m, reaching the main ridge either via the SW-ridge or from West via the glacier, followed by a difficult technical climb to reach the summit tower.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Tungurahua's recent activity period started in 1999 with the most significant eruptions between October and December 1999 and May and July 2006 ("Actividad Volcan Tungurahua". Instituto Geofísico, EPN Ecuador. Archived from the original on 2006-05-01. Retrieved 2006-08-12.)
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-05-12. Retrieved 2012-03-19. Article from World Preservation Foundation
  3. In 1934 Arturo Eichler emigrated for political reasons from Germany to Ecuador, he later became an important ecologist in Venezuela ("Arturo Eichler - Biografia". Fundacion la Era Agricola. Archived from the original on 2007-01-09. Retrieved 2006-08-05.)
  4. Jean Morawiecki was interim in charge of the French Embassy in Ecuador 1950/51 ("Ambassade". Ambassade de l'Equateur en France. Archived from the original on 2006-07-05. Retrieved 2006-08-05.)
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