Indira Col
Mountain pass in Kashmir
title: "Indira Col" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["karakoram", "mountain-passes-of-ladakh", "border-tripoints", "india–pakistan-border", "mountain-passes-of-india", "china–india-border", "mountain-passes-of-china", "mountain-passes-of-xinjiang"] description: "Mountain pass in Kashmir" topic_path: "geography/india" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indira_Col" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Mountain pass in Kashmir ::
::data[format=table title="Infobox mountain pass"]
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Indira Col |
| other_name | |
| elevation_m | 5764 |
| location | On the border between Chinese-controlled Trans-Karakoram Tract and Indian-controlled Siachen Glacier. |
| range | Eastern Karakoram Range |
| map | Karakoram#India Ladakh#India |
| map_caption | Location of the Indira Col within the greater Karakoram region |
| label_position | top |
| coordinates | |
| mapframe | yes |
| mapframe-zoom | 6 |
| mapframe-wikidata | yes |
| :: |
| name = Indira Col | other_name = | photo = | photo_caption = | elevation_m = 5764 | elevation_ref = | traversed = | location = On the border between Chinese-controlled Trans-Karakoram Tract and Indian-controlled Siachen Glacier. | range = Eastern Karakoram Range | map = Karakoram#India Ladakh#India | map_caption = Location of the Indira Col within the greater Karakoram region | label_position = top | coordinates = | topo = | mapframe = yes | mapframe-zoom = 6 | mapframe-wikidata = yes NOTOC Indira Col West is a mountain pass on the Indira Ridge of Siachen Muztagh in the Karakoram Range. It is on the border between Indian-controlled Siachen Glacier and the Chinese-controlled Trans-Karakoram Tract (both in the disputed Kashmir region), close to the tripoint of India, Pakistan, and China. The India-Pakistan Actual Ground Position Line (AGPL) in the Siachen area ends near the pass. It is possible to ascend the pass from both the north and south sides controlled by China and India respectively. It has an altitude of 5,988 m.
Indira Col East (Coord ), also called the Main Indira Col or simply Indira Col, is another col on Indira Ridge which lies 2.4 km further east of Indira Col West at 5,764 m) altitude. It is more difficult to ascend or descend on the north side controlled by China, but easier to do so from the south side controlled by India.
India Saddle" / "Turkmenistan La " / "India Saddle" in bold as there is no separate article for these, some are already redirected here, remaining features must be redirected here. Thanks. -- (Coord ), a geographical saddle, connects the Indira Col East and Indira Col West.
Indira Ridge separates the Chinese-controlled Trans-Karakoram Tract, which lies north of Indira Ridge, from the Siachen Glacier, which lies south of Indira Ridge. The AGPL end point, Indira Col West, Indira Col East, Indira Saddle, Turkestan La North, and Turkestan La East lie on the Indira Ridge from west to east.
History
Etymology
The la in Ladakhi language means a mountain pass. The eastern col was named Indira Col in 1912 by Bullock Workman, after one of the names of the goddess Lakshmi.{{Cite web |last = Kapadia |first = Harish |author-link = Harish Kapadia |title = On the Siachen Glacier, Part 2 |publisher = Indian Mountaineering Federation |year = 1998 |url = http://www.indmount.org/roseexpedition.html |access-date = 2010-08-23 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110726174853/http://www.indmount.org/roseexpedition.html |archive-date = 2011-07-26
Exploration
In 1889, British raj army officer and explorer Francis Younghusband reached the base of Turkestan La (North) from north side, and he noted that this was a long glacier and a major Central Asian dividing range.
Colonel Narendra "Bull" Kumar reached Indira Col (the western col) in 1981. In 1998 Harish Kapadia reached the same col; on his map and text he refers to it as the "main Indira Col" and "Indira Col West", whereas he refers to the col 2.4 km to the east as the "Indira Col East (Workman)." | last =Kapadia | first =Harish | author-link = Harish Kapadia | title =Across Peaks & Passes in Ladakh, Zanskar & East Karakoram | publisher =Indus Publishing Company | year =1999 | location =New Delhi, India | pages = 94; 186–89; 195 | isbn = 81-7387-100-0}} Indirakoli Pass(因地拉科里山口) name on the Chinese maps refers to coordinates is claimed by Pakistan, which is "Indira Col East".
In 1984, Indian soldiers traveled across Siachen glacier, scaled many peaks and passes including the Indira Col as part of the Operation Meghdoot.
After that, Harish Kapadia and his colleagues also explored various peaks passes, ranges subranges and glaciers in the Siachen area.
Disputed territories
Territories on all sides of Indira Col are disputed. Area south of the Indira Col West is controlled by India and also claimed by Pakistan. North of Indira Col West is Trans-Karakoram Tract claimed by India but controlled by China under a 1963 border agreement with Pakistan.{{Citation |author=The Geographer, Office of the Geographer |author-link=Office of the Geographer |title=China – Pakistan Boundary |url=http://blankonthemap.free.fr/3_geographie/33_karakoram/337_siachen/doc/Boundaries_Shaksgam.pdf |series=International Boundary Study |volume=85 |date=November 15, 1968 |publisher=Florida State University College of Law
Geography
India-China-Pakistan borders
Indira Col is near the tri-junction of India-China-Pakistan controlled areas.
Indira Ridge's features
Indira Ridge
Indira Ridge, from west to east, has following features:
- Sia Kangri,
- Indira Col West ,
- India Saddle ,
- Indira Col East,
- Turkestan La (North) (Younghusband)" / "Turkmenistan La " / "India Saddle" in bold as there is no separate article for these, some are already redirected here, remaining features must be redirected here. Thanks. -- (图尔吉斯坦拉山口, coordinates ) which was identified by the British explorer Younghusband, and
- Turkestan La (East) (traditional)" / "Turkmenistan La " / "India Saddle" in bold as there is no separate article for these, some are already redirected here, remaining features must be redirected here. Thanks. -- (coordinates ) which is an ancient or "traditional" pass.
AGPL end point
India Saddle
India Saddle
Between Indira Col West and Indira Col East is India Saddle between the Siachen Glacier to the south and the Urdok Glacier to the north in the Shaksgam (Trans-Karakoram Tract), on the watershed between the Indus River basin and the Tarim Basin. It is too steep to easily descend north from the col to the Urdok Glacier.{{Cite web |last = Kapadia |first = Harish |author-link = Harish Kapadia |title = On the Siachen Glacier, Part 4 |publisher = Indian Mountaineering Federation |year = 1998 |url = http://www.indmount.org/theindiraridge.html |access-date = 2010-08-23 |url-status = dead |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110726174750/http://www.indmount.org/theindiraridge.html |archive-date = 2011-07-26
Siachen Glacier's topography
Siachen topography
The main channel of Siachen Glacier, which flows from north to south into India, begins from the southern slope of Indira Col West. The Urdok Glacier, which flows from south to north into Trans-Karakoram Tract held by China, begins from the northern slope of Indira Col West, its subbranches Urdok I glacier flows from north to northwest from the northern slope of India Col East and Urdok II glacier flows north to northwest from the northern slope of Turkmenistan La North.
Straghar Glacier runs perpendicular to the Indira Ridge on the eastern side of the ridge (and serves as the LAC between Trans-Karakoram Tract held by China and Daulat Beg Oldi (DBO) held by India). The Siachen Glacier is explored from the Siachen Base Camp, reachable via Leh-Khalsar-Sasoma army camp-Siachen Base camp road, to the Station A which is the point where main channel of Siachen Glacier meets the Teram Shehr Glacier. From the Station A, the route goes north to Indira Col West.
References
References
- India is in ''de facto'' control of this region of Kashmir; the Indian claim is disputed by [[Pakistan]]. See e.g. ''[https://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/south_asia/03/kashmir_future/html/default.stm The Future of Kashmir]'' on the [[BBC]] website.
- [http://tribune.com.pk/story/368394/the-fight-for-siachen/ The fight for Siachen]
- "The endless India-Pakistan sabre-rattling over Siachen glacier and the Line of Control can be resolved by turning the area into a peace park for glacial and weather studies, by B G Verghese, and more from Asian Conversations and Dancing Wolf Media".
- [https://www.indiatoday.in/magazine/special-report/story/19920531-siachen-while-the-battle-continues-to-rage-no-settlement-is-in-sight-766379-2013-06-13 They shall not pass]
- "Bullish on siachen".
- [http://www.livemint.com/Leisure/LGHTfRB4vQFou30J4noLcJ/Bull8217s-glacier.html Bull’s glacier]
- [http://www.openthemagazine.com/article/nation/the-colonel-who-got-us-siachen The Colonel Who Got Us Siachen]
- "Ice Station Taurus".
- (15 November 1968). "International Boundary Study No. 85 – China-Pakistan Boundary".
- "Revisiting Siachen after the Ladakh stand-off".
- Desmond/Kashmir, Edward W.. (31 July 1989). "The Himalayas War at the Top Of the World". [[Time (magazine).
- Desmond, Edward W.. (31 July 1989). "The Himalayas War at the Top Of the World".
- [[Harish Kapadia]], 1999, Saga of Siachen, The Himalayan Journal, Vol.55.
- 2015, [https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/B740595220CAA3299AD969CF49BC061B/S0022143000202062a.pdf/mass_balance_of_siachen_glacier_nubra_valley_karakoram_himalaya_facts_or_flaws.pdf Mass baalance of Siachen glacier], Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 61, No. 229, p.1012.
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