German-Soviet Alay-Pamir Expedition


The German-Soviet Alay-Pamir Expedition was undertaken in 1928 by the Academy of Sciences of the USSR and the Emergency Association of German Science. Along with the scientists, four mountaineers from the German and Austrian Alpine Club also participated. The five-month-long expedition to the Alay Valley and the Trans-Alay Range in Pamir was under the direction of Nikolai Petrovich Gorbunov and the organizational leadership of Willi Rickmer Rickmers. The deputy expedition leader was the geodesist and cartographer Richard Finsterwalder.

Research work

The Soviet participants were responsible for mineralogy, petrography and geodetic/astronomical research, while the Germans were responsible for geology, surveying, mapping, glaciology and linguistics.
About 400 photogrammetric images were taken to map the region. The Fedchenko Glacier was also measured for the first time, which is the longest glacier outside of the polar regions.

Mountaineering

On 25 September 1928, Karl Wien, Eugen Allwein and Erwin Schneider made the first ascent of the 7,134 m high Lenin Peak, which was at the time the highest climbed peak in the world.

Participants

The German and Soviet sides each contributed eleven expedition members. Including servants, porters, and translators, the expedition totalled 65 men, 160 horses, and 60 camels.
Belayev, I. G. Dorofeyev, Nikolai Gorbunov, K. W. Isakov, Nikolai Korzhenevsky, Alexander Nikolayevich Labunzov, Michalkov, Reichardt and Sokolov, Dmitrii Ivanovich Zcherbakov, R. R. Zimmermann and as visitors Otto Schmidt, Nikolai Krylenko, Yelena Rosmirovich and Dr. Rossels.
Eugen Allwein, Hans Biersack, Philipp Borchers, Richard Finsterwalder, Franz Kohlhaupt, Wolfgang Lentz, Ludwig Nöth, William Frederick Reinig, Willi Rickmer Rickmers, Erwin Schneider, Karl Wien.

Literature