Mount Kilimanjaro
| Other names/spellings | Kilima
Dscharo Kilimandscharo Kilima Njaro (Swahili) Oldoinyo Oibor (Masai) |
| Elevation (feet) | 19,340 |
| Elevation (metres) | 5,895 |
| Location | Tanzania |
| Latitude | 3° 04' S |
| Longitude | 37° 21' E |
| Best Climbing Months | December,
January, February, March June, July, August |
| Year First Climbed | 1889 |
| First Climber(s) | Hans
Meyer L. Purtscheller |
| Volcanic Status | Extinct |
| Most Recent Eruption | None on record |
| Convenient Center(s) | Marangu,
Tanzania via Moshi, Tanzania |
| Nearest Major Airport | Nairobi, Kenya |
Kilimanjaro is the highest mountain in Africa, located in Northeast Tanzania, near the Kenya border. Kilimanjaro is an extinct volcano, and is one of the most massive in the world. It towers 15,000 feet above the surrounding arid plains, and 2.5 square miles of its surface are over 18,500 feet. Beneath its ice dome, snow extends down long gullies that have been eroded in the mountain sides.
Kilimanjaro's summit crater, known as Kibo, measures an incredible 1.5 miles across. The highest point on Kibo's steep rim is Uhuru, the highest peak in Africa. Nestled in the center of Kibo is a smaller crater, 600-feet deep in sulfurous ashes.
The lower slopes of the mountain are defined by coffee and banana fields that rise up and end where the mountain's forest begins. An average of 80 inches of rainfall a year make the forest home to some botanical treats. Tree ferns in this region are known to grow up to 20 feet, and giant lobelia often reach 30 feet. At an altitude of about 9,000 feet, the forest gives way to grasslands and shrubbery, and elephant can sometimes be spotted roaming the high slopes. At about 13,000 feet life begins to recede, a result of extreme weather conditions inhospitable to anything more than small mosses and lichens. Once the summit area is reached, three glaciers and three volcanic peaks sit in lofty, placid contemplation of the tremendous plains over 3.5 miles below.
It is highly advisable to take the mountain slowly. The thin air is a well-known killer of impatient weekend climbers, who misjudge their abilities and ascend too fast. Altitude sickness is common and can be fatal. No climb is permitted without a guide, and there are six routes up the mountain with varying degrees of difficulty. Huts are available at different points along the way, and the final ascent begins near midnight (so melting snow isn't a problem) and culminates with a spectacular sunrise at the peak.
Source: OFFICIAL WEBSITE OF Tanzania High Commission, London
www.wildernet.com