This page is about an area of the Himalayas along or near to the Bhutan-Tibet border. A Japanese sketch map is shown here, based on modern Chinese military mapping. But despite the respective 7538m and 7570m elevations shown on this map, the most commonly quoted elevations of the two main summits are 7554m for Kula Kangri, and 7541m for Kangkar Punsum.
All authorities have KP on the political border, but most authorities extend this border as far east as KK, then switching back south-west to KP before continuing eastwards. Bhutanese government websites include a map which shows this border and a document which claims Kula Kangri (7554m) as its national high point. This border and HP are disputed by Chinese and some other authorities, who claim that the border does not extend to within 15km of KK, and that KK is wholly in Tibet. This page supports the latter point of view.
Background Information.
According to Eberhrd Jurgalski, "the first Western researcher in Bhutan was Professor Augusto Gansser, beginning back in the 1960's. He published many articles in the Berge der Welt (Mountain World) series of the Swiss Foundation of Alpine Research, where he explained names and also the border to Tibet. In a book called The Geology of the Bhutan Himalaya (Basel 1983, ISBN 3-7643-1371-4) he summarized his knowledge. All the time he claimed Kangkar Pünzum as the highest peak in Bhutan, even if Kula Kangri was higher. It is 20 km within Tibet. I saw only on later commercial maps, that the border was more to the North."
Eberhard continues: "On a peak list published in Die Alpen in 1972, Dyhrenfurth listed "Künla Khari" (7554 m), Kangkar Pünzum I (7541 m), KP II (7532 m) and KP III (7516 m)." These elevations are the most widely quoted today, although the former is generally called Kula Kangri. But "then, in 1980, Toni Hiebeler's book Himalaya and Karakorum was published. On page 197 he supplied the names Künla Khari I to IV". These have been reproduced as several Kula Kangri's by some authorities, but to the best of our knowledge there is nothing correctly named Kula Kangri in the KP area.
"Then, in High magazine #186 (May 1998), on page 23, a Japanese book Mountains of the Himalayas by Yoshimi Yakushi was mentioned, with new heights for many peaks on the Bhutan-Tibet border. Yakushi used most recent (but for us restricted) survey maps from the Chinese military." The above mentioned sketch map is from this book.
Which is correct?
On the border course, it seems that there has been no formal agreement between China and Bhutan. In this situation, there will be divergence of views. For my part, While I can accept our tendency to support the position of Bhutan in preference to that of its much larger neighbour, I will not allow that tendency to prejudice my conclusions. I argue that Kula Kangri belongs exclusively to Tibet. Nobody lives in the disputed area, so political considerations are irrelevant; therefore I argue that the most logical course for the border is along the watershed divide. In the past, the course of the divide was unclear, but now SRTM data, shown on this color relief map, clearly shows that the divide passes well to the south of Kula Kangri, which lies on a north-eastern spur. The SRTM void areas have been fixed for clarity, but the course of the divide is indisputable. Consequently Bhutan's claim that Kula Kangri is its high point should be rejected, whatever the relative elevations of KP and KK. And, despite what the Bhutanese websites and commercial maps may indicate, authorities with detailed topographical knowledge of this area tend to take this view. Large scale commercial maps draw the border east to KK, then south west to KP, then east again, but I challenge any critics to re-draw a logical border on the relief map in this manner.
It is also worth noting that, if the border drawn on Bhutanese and commercial maps were correct, the Japanese expedition documented here would have had to pass through Bhutanese territory. If Bhutan were really serious about
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