Why the more number of tourist visits Mount Fuji than The world highest mountain Mt. Everest

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Mount Everest is the highest peak in the world. The highest mountain peak is a most popular mountain in the world. Mount Everest (8848m, 29029ft) is the most astounding mountain on the planet. The summit edge of the mountain denotes the outskirt amongst Nepal and Tibet. 

Tallness: The official stature of Mount Everest was computed to be 8848m (29,028 ft) in 1954. In 1999 the American Everest Expedition utilized GPS to recalculate the stature to be 8850m. In 2005 the Chinese Everest Expedition Team utilized confused estimation and computation to quantify the stature of Everest to be 8844.43 m (29,017.07 ft). This new stature depends on the genuine most elevated purpose of shake and not on the snow and ice that sits on that stone on the summit. Mount Everest is as yet developing in tallness by a couple of centimeters every 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 ancestor, Sir George Everest. In Nepal, the mountain is called Sagarmatha (Forehead of the Sky) and in Tibetan Chomolungma or Qomolangma (Mother of the Universe).

But due to the many problems in the country like transportation facilities, political instability, the problem of proper hygienic food and much more, the number of tourist visit in Mount Everest is very less.  According to the tourism industry Mount is better than the world highest mountain peaks. A large number of tourists visit in Japan for Mount Fuji. Due to the better transportation routes, better food facilities, better accommodation a large number of tourists visits in Japan.

The major problem of Mount Everest is that It is polluted.The more than 700 climbers and aides who spend about two months on Everest's slants each climbing season leave a lot of dung and pee, and the issue has not been tended to, Ang Tshering told columnists. 

He said Nepal's administration needs to get the climbers to discard the waste legitimately so the mountain stays flawless. 

Many outside climbers endeavor to scale Everest amid Nepal's mountaineering season, which started for the current week and goes through May. A year ago's season was crossed out after 16 neighborhood guides were murdered in a torrential slide in April. 


Climbers invest weeks acclimatizing around the four camps set up between the base camp at 5,300m (17,380ft) and the 8,850m-high (29,035ft) summit. The camps have tents and some fundamental hardware and supplies, yet don't have toilets. 

"Climbers more often than not dive gaps in the snow for their can utilize and leave the human waste there," Tshering stated, including that the waste has been "heaping up" for a considerable length of time around the four camps. 

At the base camp, where there are more watchmen, cooks and care staff amid the climbing season, there are can tent with drums to store the waste. Once filled, the drums are conveyed to a lower range, where the waste is appropriately arranged. 

Dawa Steven Sherpa, who has been driving Everest clean-up campaigns since 2008, said a few climbers convey expandable travel latrine packs to use in the higher camps. 

"It is a well-being peril and the issue should be tended to," he said.




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