Mount Aconcagua, mountain in western Mendoza province, west-central Argentina, on the Chilean border. It is the highest point in the Western Hemisphere.
Aconcagua lies in the Southern Andes Mountains; although its peak is in Argentina, its western flanks build up from the coastal lowlands of Chile, just north of Santiago. Its name possibly originated from the Quechua Ackon Cahuak (“Sentinel of Stone”). Aconcagua is of volcanic origin, but it is not itself an active volcano. It has two summits—north and south—connected by a ridge (Cresta del Guanaco) that is about 0.6 mile (1 km) long. The first attempted ascent, made in 1883, failed; the highest (north) summit was first reached in 1897 by Swiss climber Matthias Zurbriggen.
Aconcagua is widely accepted as the highest peak in the Western Hemisphere, but its precise elevation has been debated since the early 20th century. The Military Geographical Institute of Argentina documents its highest summit as 22,831 feet (6,959 metres) above sea level, a figure that has been in general use. In January 2001 a team of scientists led by Italian geologist Giorgio Poretti measured Aconcagua’s height using advanced Global Positioning System (GPS) technology and reported an elevation of 22,840 feet (6,962 metres), plus or minus 16 feet (5 metres). Although this new figure has been widely reported, it is not officially recognized by Argentina’s government or by the National Geographic Society in the United States. The southern summit has been measured at 22,736 feet (6,930 metres).