{"ranges":[{"title":"Himalayas","canonical":"himalayas","link":"/range/himalayas.html"}],"parks":[],"districts":[{"country":{"code":"bt","name":"Bhutan"},"regions":[{"level":2,"id":"bhutan","name":"Bhutan","link":"/adm/bhutan.html"},{"level":4,"id":"bumthang-district","name":"Bumthang District","link":"/adm/bumthang-district.html"}]},{"country":{"code":"cn","name":"China"},"regions":[{"level":2,"id":"china","name":"China","link":"/adm/china.html"},{"level":4,"id":"tibet-autonomous-region","name":"Tibet","link":"/adm/tibet-autonomous-region.html"},{"level":6,"id":"lhozhag-county","name":"Lhozhag County","link":"/adm/lhozhag-county.html"}]}],"countries":[{"code":"BT","name":"Bhutan","link":"/adm/bhutan.html"},{"code":"CN","name":"China","link":"/adm/china.html"}],"routes":[],"gettingHere":[],"tags":{"osm_version":"12","ele":"7570","name":"岗嘎本松峰 གངས་དཀར་སྤུན་གསུམ་","name_dz":"གངས་དཀར་སྤུན་གསུམ་","name_en":"Gangkhar Puensum","name_es":"Gangkhar Puensum","name_ru":"Канкар-Пунсум","name_zh":"岗嘎本松","natural":"peak","prominence":"2990","source_prominence":"7570-4580 (Tang La)","wikidata":"Q219986","description":"Gangkhar Puensum (Dzongkha: གངས་དཀར་སྤུན་གསུམ་, romanized: Kangkar Punsum, alternatively, Gangkar Punsum or Gankar Punzum) is the highest mountain in Bhutan and the highest unclimbed mountain in the world, with an elevation of 7,570 metres (24,836 ft) and a prominence of 2,995 metres (9,826 ft). In Dzongkha language, its name means \"White Peak of the Three Spiritual Brothers\".\nGangkhar Puensum lies on the border between Bhutan and Tibet. After Bhutan was opened for mountaineering in 1983, there were four expeditions that resulted in failed summit attempts in 1985 and 1986. In 1999, a Japanese expedition successfully climbed Liankang Kangri, a 7,535 metres (24,721 ft) subsidiary peak (not an independent mountain), separated from the main peak by a 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) long ridge to the north-northwest but had to turn around when their permit was revoked. \nIn 1994 Bhutan banned the climbing of peaks over 6,000 metres and since 2003, all mountaineering has been banned in Bhutan.","wikipedia":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gangkhar_Puensum"},"skitours":[],"id":5254355233,"data":{"_id":"5254355233","elevation":[{"id":"tibet-autonomous-region","nid":"2000000153292","name":"Tibet","type":"ADM","level":4,"index":20,"total":936},{"id":"bhutan","nid":"2000000184629","name":"Bhutan","type":"ADM","level":2,"index":1,"total":45},{"id":"china","nid":"2000000270056","name":"China","type":"ADM","level":2,"index":29,"total":12241},{"id":"lhozhag-county","nid":"20000002743970","name":"Lhozhag County","type":"ADM","level":6,"index":1,"total":21},{"id":"bumthang-district","nid":"20000003899602","name":"Bumthang District","type":"ADM","level":4,"index":1,"total":2},{"id":"himalayas","nid":"4013613267","name":"Himalayas","type":"MR","level":1,"index":49,"total":3458}],"prominence":[{"id":"tibet-autonomous-region","nid":"2000000153292","name":"Tibet","type":"ADM","level":4,"index":3,"total":936},{"id":"bhutan","nid":"2000000184629","name":"Bhutan","type":"ADM","level":2,"index":1,"total":45},{"id":"china","nid":"2000000270056","name":"China","type":"ADM","level":2,"index":12,"total":12241},{"id":"lhozhag-county","nid":"20000002743970","name":"Lhozhag County","type":"ADM","level":6,"index":1,"total":21},{"id":"bumthang-district","nid":"20000003899602","name":"Bumthang District","type":"ADM","level":4,"index":1,"total":2},{"id":"himalayas","nid":"4013613267","name":"Himalayas","type":"MR","level":1,"index":7,"total":3458}]},"canonicalUrl":"gangkhar-puensum","type":1,"description":"Gangkhar Puensum (Dzongkha: གངས་དཀར་སྤུན་གསུམ་, romanized: Kangkar Punsum, alternatively, Gangkar Punsum or Gankar Punzum) is the highest mountain in Bhutan and the highest unclimbed mountain in the world, with an elevation of 7,570 metres (24,836 ft) and a prominence of 2,995 metres (9,826 ft). In Dzongkha language, its name means \"White Peak of the Three Spiritual Brothers\".<br/><br/>Gangkhar Puensum lies on the border between Bhutan and Tibet. After Bhutan was opened for mountaineering in 1983, there were four expeditions that resulted in failed summit attempts in 1985 and 1986. In 1999, a Japanese expedition successfully climbed Liankang Kangri, a 7,535 metres (24,721 ft) subsidiary peak (not an independent mountain), separated from the main peak by a 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) long ridge to the north-northwest but had to turn around when their permit was revoked. <br/><br/>In 1994 Bhutan banned the climbing of peaks over 6,000 metres and since 2003, all mountaineering has been banned in Bhutan.<div id=\"mountain-metrics-description\">By elevation Gangkhar Puensum is<br/><div class=\"sidebar__hs-color-2\">#&thinsp;20 out of 936 in Tibet<br/>#&thinsp;1 out of 45 in Bhutan<br/>#&thinsp;29 out of 12241 in China<br/>#&thinsp;1 out of 21 in Lhozhag County<br/>#&thinsp;1 out of 2 in Bumthang District<br/>#&thinsp;49 out of 3458 in the Himalayas</div><br/>By prominence Gangkhar Puensum is<br/><div class=\"sidebar__hs-color-2\">#&thinsp;3 out of 936 in Tibet<br/>#&thinsp;1 out of 45 in Bhutan<br/>#&thinsp;12 out of 12241 in China<br/>#&thinsp;1 out of 21 in Lhozhag County<br/>#&thinsp;1 out of 2 in Bumthang District<br/>#&thinsp;7 out of 3458 in the Himalayas</div></div>","wikipedia":"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gangkhar_Puensum","images":[{"url":"https://wikimedia-commons.fra1.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/SD/GangkharPuensum3.jpg","id":"GangkharPuensum3","options":["SD"],"location":{"type":"Point","coordinates":[90.454528,28.047278]},"author":{"url":"https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AGangkharPuensum3.jpg","nickname":"Rhion","license":"RELEASED INTO PD"}},{"url":"https://wikimedia-commons.fra1.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/SD/Himalayan_peak_from_Bumthang.jpg","id":"Himalayan_peak_from_Bumthang","options":["SD","HD"],"location":{"type":"Point","coordinates":[90.454528,28.047278]},"author":{"url":"https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AHimalayan_peak_from_Bumthang.jpg","nickname":"Christopher J. Fynn","license":"BY-SA 4.0"}},{"url":"https://wikimedia-commons.fra1.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/SD/Gangkhar_puensum_landscape.jpg","id":"Gangkhar_puensum_landscape","options":["SD","HD"],"location":{"type":"Point","coordinates":[90.454528,28.047278]},"author":{"url":"https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AGangkhar_puensum_landscape.JPG","nickname":"Gradythebadger","license":"BY-SA 4.0"}},{"url":"https://wikimedia-commons.fra1.cdn.digitaloceanspaces.com/SD/Gangkhar_puensum_summit.jpg","id":"Gangkhar_puensum_summit","options":["SD","HD"],"location":{"type":"Point","coordinates":[90.454528,28.047278]},"author":{"url":"https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AGangkhar_puensum_summit.JPG","nickname":"Gradythebadger","license":"BY-SA 4.0"}}],"name":"Gangkhar Puensum","distance":null,"prominence":"2997","eprom":{"parent":{"name":"Mount Everest","location":{"coordinates":[86.92494,27.988262]},"elevation":"8848","prominence":"8848","canonicalUrl":"mount-everest"},"parDist":346913.5013417101,"nhn":{"name":"Zemu Gap Peak","location":{"coordinates":[88.174102,27.687149]},"elevation":"7780","prominence":"133","canonicalUrl":"zemu-gap-peak"},"nhnDist":227965.7874576949,"keycol":{"lat":27.839444,"lng":89.177778,"dist":127669.85238896897,"name":null},"isolation":25478.177834603586,"ilp":{"lat":28.226389,"lng":90.616111},"proportionalProminence":"6202"},"categories":[{"code":"ultra","name":"Ultra","sortingWeight":5,"desc":"Mountains with prominence of 1&#x2006;&#x2060;500&#x2006;&#x2060;m / 4&#x2006;&#x2060;921&#x2006;&#x2060;ft or more.","listLink":null}],"alt":7570,"lat":28.047278,"lng":90.454528,"formattedCoordinates":"28°2′50″N 90°27′16″E","isVolcano":false}