Mount Everest 8848m


Mount Everest North Face and Rongbuk Monastery Morning

Mount Everest North Face and Rongbuk Monastery Morning


Mount Everest North Face From Rongbuk At Sunset

Mount Everest North Face From Rongbuk At Sunset


Lhotse and Everest Kangshung East Face

Lhotse and Everest Kangshung East Face


Sunrise On Shartse II, Lhotse Shar Middle And Main, Mount Everest Northeast Ridge, Pinnacles And Summit From The Climb From Lhakpa Ri Camp I To The Summit

Sunrise On Shartse II, Lhotse, Mount Everest Northeast Ridge, Pinnacles And Summit From The Climb To Lhakpa Ri Summit

Mount Everest (8848m, 29029ft) is the highest mountain in the world. The summit ridge of the mountain marks the border between Nepal and Tibet.

Height: The official height of Mount Everest was calculated  to be 8848m (29,028 ft) in 1954. In 1999 the American Everest Expedition used GPS to recalculate the height to be 8850m. In 2005 the Chinese Everest Expedition Team used complicated measurement and calculation to measure the height of Everest to be 8844.43 m (29,017.07 ft). This new height is based on the actual highest point of rock and not on the snow and ice that sits on top of that rock on the summit. Mount Everest is still growing in height by a few centimetres each year as the India plate slides under the Asian plate.

Name: Peak XV of the Indian Survey was named Mount Everest by Sir Andrew Waugh, the British surveyor-general of India, who named it after his predecessor, Sir George Everest.  In Nepal, the mountain is called Sagarmatha (Forehead of the Sky) and in Tibetan Chomolungma or Qomolangma (Mother of the Universe).

Show Icon

Everest Trek Routes

Show Icon

Everest First Ascent

Show Icon

Everest Routes First Ascents