The Seti River is a river running down from the Himalaya range in north-west and has cut many deep gorges through its path. It is one of the major tributaries of Sapta Gandaki river in Nepal.
Mount Everest, also called Chomolungma or Qomolangma in Tibetan or Sagarmatha in Nepali is the premier mountain on Earth, as calculated by the height of its peak above sea level, comes to 8,848 m or 29,028 ft. The mountain, that constitutes a part of the Himalaya
Panch Pokhri (5,494 meters = 18,025 feet) is a group of three sacred lakes in Nepal about 6 kilometers east of Ama Dablam (the mountain). The main lake is at 5,414 meters; the other two lakes are at 5430m and 5494m. Since we're going for the highest lake here, I'll list the height of the uppermost lake (the one to the northeast) for ranking purposes. That makes Panch Pokhri the highest named lake in the world as of August 2003. Panch Pokhri 5494 is about 700 meters long by 400 meters wide. Panch Pokhri 5414 is about 1.6 kilometers long by 500 meters wide, not including that inlet on the southwest shore.
Tsho Rolpa lake is at 4,600 meters (15,092 feet). Tsho Rolpa Lake is formed by a glacial moraine that partially blocks the flow of meltwater from the glacier. Due to global warming, there is more meltwater these days than there used to be. Glacial moraines, "constructed" naturally from rubble and glacial till, don't make very strong dams. The danger is that the moraine dam will burst in a Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) and inundate the villages downstream in the valley.
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