A Chinese scientific expedition team reached the summit of Cho Oyu, the world’s sixth-highest mountain, on Sunday morning, state media reported.
The 18 members of the expedition team will undertake various scientific tasks at an extreme altitude, including setting up high-altitude automatic weather stations, measuring the thickness of the summit’s ice and snow, drilling ice cores, and collecting snow, ice and rock samples.
How deep is the snow on Mount Everest? A Chinese team has new answers
How deep is the snow on Mount Everest? A Chinese team has new answers
Its peak is about 8,201 metres above sea level and, as with Everest, is covered in snow year round.
Expedition commander An Baosheng said the expedition involved more than 120 scientists from four scientific teams, and aimed to uncover the effects of changes in high-altitude areas on the environment of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau.
This expedition is the first since China enacted a national law to conserve the plateau’s ecology last month.
Yao Tandong, a member of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and a leader of the expedition, said Cho Oyu had the thickest ice and snow cover of all the peaks above 8,000 metres, offering the richest potential archive of high-altitude climate change.
Yao said the Cho Oyu expedition was also important because the peak was an ideal location for conducting dynamic research on human health at extreme altitudes.