Terpene

Lyaskovets Peak
Lyaskovets Peak from Kuzman Knoll, with Shipka Saddle to the left, Catalunyan Saddle to the right, and Zograf Peak in the foreground.
Highest point
Elevation1,473 m (4,833 ft)
Prominence213
Coordinates62°39′48.5″S 60°08′34.7″W / 62.663472°S 60.142972°W / -62.663472; -60.142972
Geography
LocationLivingston Island, Antarctica
Parent rangeTangra Mountains
Climbing
First ascent14 December 2004 Lyubomir Ivanov and Doychin Vasilev
Easiest routesnow/glacier
Location of Tangra Mountains on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands
The first ascent of Lyaskovets Peak by Lyubomir Ivanov and Doychin Vasilev on 14 December 2004; south view from the summit with Bransfield Strait and Antarctic Peninsula in the background

Lyaskovets Peak (Bulgarian: връх Лясковец, romanizedvrah Lyaskovets, IPA: [ˈvrɤx ˈʎaskovɛt͡s]) is the easternmost peak of Friesland Ridge in the Tangra Mountains, eastern Livingston Island and has an elevation of 1,473 m. The peak is bounded by Catalunyan Saddle on the west and Shipka Saddle on the east, and is heavily glaciated and crevassed, with precipitous western, southern and eastern slopes. It surmounts Huron Glacier to the northwest and northeast, and Macy Glacier and Brunow Bay area to the south. Its northern offshoot forms Zograf Peak, and is linked to Lozen Nunatak, Erma Knoll and Aheloy Nunatak in Huron Glacier.

The peak is named after Lyaskovets, a town in central northern Bulgaria.

Location[edit]

Lyaskovets Peak is located at 62°39′48.5″S 60°08′34.7″W / 62.663472°S 60.142972°W / -62.663472; -60.142972, which is 2.3 km east-northeast of Mount Friesland (the summit of Friesland Ridge and Livingston Island, 1,700 m), 3.2 km south-southeast of Kuzman Knoll, 1.33 km south by east of Zograf Peak, 1.3 km west of Levski Peak, and 4.6 km west by north of Great Needle Peak (the summit of Levski Ridge, approx. 1,690 m). The feature was mapped by the UK Directorate of Overseas Surveys in 1968, and by Bulgaria in 2005 and 2009.

History[edit]

The first ascent of Lyaskovets Peak was made on 14 December 2004 by Lyubomir Ivanov and Doychin Vasilev from Camp Academia (541 m) during the Tangra 2004/05 Survey. Their route (UIAA grade III) started with 4 km of solid but crevassed firn surface ascent up to Catalunyan Saddle (1,260 m) on the main crest of Tangra Mountains, from where they traversed the precipitous west slope of the peak until the north slope was reached, from where the summit – itself split by a crevasse – was easily reached.[1][2]

The second ascent, also by way of Ivanov–Vasilev route, was made by the Bulgarian mountaineers Doychin Boyanov and Nikolay Petkov on 1 January 2015.[3]

See also[edit]

Maps[edit]

Gallery[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ L.L. Ivanov, Livingston Island: Tangra Mountains, Komini Peak, west slope new rock route; Lyaskovets Peak, first ascent; Zograf Peak, first ascent; Vidin Heights, Melnik Peak, Melnik Ridge, first ascent, The American Alpine Journal, 2005, pp. 312–315.
  2. ^ Antarctica: Livingston Island, Climb Magazine, Issue 14, Kettering, UK, April 2006, 89-91.
  3. ^ Doychin Boyanov and Nikolay Petkov on Lyaskovets Peak in Antarctica. 360° Magazine, 5 January 2015. ISSN 1313-9959 (in Bulgarian)


North view of Tangra Mountains depicting (left to right) Great Needle Peak, Levski Peak, Lyaskovets Peak, Mount Friesland, St. Boris Peak and Simeon Peak, with Desolation Island in the foreground; fragment of an illustration to George Powell's 1822 chart of the South Shetland and South Orkney Islands

References[edit]

External links[edit]


This article includes information from the Antarctic Place-names Commission of Bulgaria which is used with permission.

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