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Hans Christian Doseth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hans Christian Doseth
Born(1958-12-10)10 December 1958
Died6 August 1984(1984-08-06) (aged 25)
Nationalitynorwegian
OccupationClimber
Known formountaineering
The Trango Towers in northern Pakistan

Hans Christian Doseth (December 10, 1958 in Romsdal, Norway – August 6, 1984 in Pakistan) was a Norwegian climber.[1]

Achievements

Among his achievements were several first ascents of routes on Trollveggen (Troll Wall), Romsdal's north facing big wall, both in winter and summer. He did the first all-free ascent of the wall in 1979 (the "Rimmon Route"), and the first winter ascent of the "Swedish Route" (1980). Most notable was his first ascent of the technically difficult "Trollkjerringruta" (the Troll's Wife) [2] in winter (1982), followed by the free ascent in summer 1983. Though moderately graded by today's standards (Norw. grade 7, French grade 6c+), it is a demanding, serious climb through partly loose and poorly protected rock that up to this day has seen only two or three repeats. Doseth also increased awareness of sport climbing in Northern Europe, introducing routes in the 5.12 range (French 7b/c) in Norway and Sweden in the early 80s.

Death

Doseth died along with his climbing partner Finn Dæhli[1] during an expedition with Stein P. Aasheim and Dag Kolsrud on Great Trango Tower (6286 m) in Karakoram, Pakistan, during descent, after establishing the Norwegian Buttress,[3] the first route to scale the massive east face of the mountain. The causes of the accident are not known.

References

  1. ^ a b Stein P. Aasheim, Fabio Palma Senza ritorno. Hans Christian Doseth, Italian, Alpine Studio, June 2010, ISBN 978-88-96822-02-9
  2. ^ Troll Wall, Bigwalls.net
  3. ^ Norwegians repeat historic Trango route - Climbing magazine

External links

Literature

  • Bø, Bjarte and Anne Grete Nebell, Klatring i Romsdal, 1999.
  • Stein P. Aasheim, Trango – triumf og tragedie, Scanbok, 1985
This page was last edited on 13 December 2020, at 21:32
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