Speaker:
Stephen Venables
Bio:
Stephen Venables is a writer and mountaineer who was the first Briton to climb Mt Everest without the aid of supplementary oxygen.  He is a former president of the the Alpine Club and of the South Georgia Association, having led ten expeditions to that sub-antarctic island.  He has published twelve books and appeared in several television documentaries, most memorably climbing the Matterhorn in Victorian dress.
Date:
24 January 2024
Time:
7:30pm – 9:30pm

EVEREST EAST SIDE STORY

The title of his talk refers to the rarely visited Kangshung Face of Everest, in Tibet, where Stephen and three American companions pioneered a new route to the summit in 1988.  He will relate that epic climb in the context of the earliest Everest expeditions, in particular the 1921 Reconnaissance, which was the first to explore the eastern and northern approaches to the mountain, seventeen years after Col Younghusband’s brief and ill-advised invasion of Tibet. Stephen will also touch on the first ascent in 1953; the leader of that expedition, John Hunt, was also ‘honorary leader’ of the 1988 expedition.  Keen mountain historians will  note that 2024 is the centenary of the 1924 expedition when George Mallory and Sandy Irvine disappeared near the summit.

GeneralNatural History

Venue: Sir Charles Wilson Building, University of Glasgow

Address: University of Glasgow, 1 University Avenue, Glasgow G12 8QQ

- at the corner of University Avenue and Gibson Street.

This lecture theatre is very atmospheric, as you can see in the picture above. It has all modern facilities but retains many original features in a beautifully refurbished church building. There are good public transport links, free parking very close by in the University grounds from 5pm, plus nice places to eat or drink before the lecture if you want to make a night of it.

The venue has a hearing loop which can be accessed via a hearing aid. The best reception for the loop can be achieved by audience members sitting in one of the front six rows.

Join the Society

Membership brings free access to all talks as well as other benefits. After each talk you can meet the lecturer and other society members over a glass of wine.

MEMBERSHIP IS FREE FOR STUDENTS AND UNDER 25'S