Snow
Lake, or Lukpe Lawo,
is a high-altitude
glacial basin in the
Karakoram mountain
range in the
Northern Areas of
Pakistan.
Characteristics
Snow Lake is located
16,000 feet above
sea level, and is
approximately 10
miles wide. The
basin lies at the
head of the Biafo
and Hispar glaciers,
which spread down
from the Hispar Pass
in opposite
directions, forming
a 75-mile river of
ice that is among
the world's longest
continuous glacier
systems outside of
the polar regions.
Famous visitors
Martin Conway, the
first foreign
visitor, gave Snow
Lake the name in
1892. Conway
described Snow Lake
as "beyond all
comparison the
finest view of
mountains it has
ever been my lot to
behold, nor do I
believe the world
can hold a
finer."[1] Snow Lake
is very difficult to
reach, however, and
only about 200
people manage to
reach it per
year.[2] In 1899,
the husband-wife
team of William
Hunter Workman and
Fanny Bullock
Workman came and
speculated that Snow
Lake might be an
ice-cap like those
in the polar
regions, from which
glacier flowed out
in all directions,
and estimated its
total size at 300
square miles.
Getting there
The journey to Snow
Lake typically
begins in Skardu,
which can be reached
by plane or jeep
from Islamabad. From
Skardu, a jeep may
escort travellers
through the Braldu
Gorge to the village
of Askole. The trek
from Askole
initially proceeds
towards K2, then
turns northwest up
the Biafo Glacier to
Snow Lake. The
descent differs from
the ascent, going
through the Hunza
Valley and ending in
Gilgit, from where a
return to Islamabad
can be arranged by
plane or jeep. |