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Sudesh
08-12-2010, 02:49 PM
http://godheadv.blogspot.com/2010/04/abandoned-on-everest.html

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/blog_everest1.jpg

In 2006, a lone climber attempting the summit of Mount Everest for the third time was, purely by chance, caught in an amateur photograph taken by another climber of the scenic mountaintop ahead. The climber in the photograph was making his way up what is known as the Final Push of the Northeast ridge, between Camp VI at 8,230 m and the summit. It was late in the afternoon, a foolishly reckless time to undertake the lengthy and dangerous route.

It would be many hours before the the photographer and his climbing team saw the man again. Leaving the camp at the recommended time, shortly before midnight in order to reach the summit at daybreak, they were first in line of a total of roughly 40 climbers attempting the Final Push that day. A long train of men, all tethered to the lengths of rope permanently in place to keep climbers on the right track.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/blog_everest2.jpg


For decades, this rope had taken climbers within a few feet of what become known as Green Boots cave. A small limestone overhang located at 8500 m, it was already infamous among climbers for the same reason it earned its nickname. For the past ten years, the body of a climber who died in 1996 has been a grim landmark for every climber of the Northeast route, lying curled up in the fetal position, wearing fluorescent green mountaineering boots.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/2003127792.jpg


This morning, however, Green Boots had company. Sitting no more than two feet to the left of the corpse was a man who at first glance appeared to be dead. His hands were on his knees, his hood and hat cast his face in shadow. The only feature visible was the man's severely frostbitten nose, already a greenish black hue. On closer inspection, the vapor from the man's breath could be seen rising.

What happened next entered the folklore of the highest mountain on earth. Every man interviewed gives a different story. What is certain is that every single one of the 40-odd climbers attempting the summit that day left the man in the cave, whose name was David Sharp, to freeze, either by choice, by ignorance, or by misjudging him as a corpse they already expected to see in that infamous cave.

While chilling in itself, the incident pales in the bigger context of the deadliness of Mount Everest. For every ten climbers who have ever reached the summit, the mountain has claimed one of them. In the 56 years since the first men in history reached the top, 216 people have died, and the grim reality of the horrific conditions of the Final Push is that 150 bodies have never been, and likely can never be, recovered. They are all still there, and located, almost without exception, in the Death Zone.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/Everest-Skull1.jpg

Sudesh
08-12-2010, 02:51 PM
Above a certain altitude, no human can ever acclimatize. Known as the Death Zone, only on 14 mountains worldwide can one step beyond the 8000 meter mark and know that no amount of training or conditioning will ever allow you to spend more than 48 hours there. The oxygen level in the Death Zone is only one third of the sea level value, which in simple terms means the body will use up its store of oxygen faster than breathing can replenish it.

In such conditions, odd things happen to human physical and mental states. A National Geographic climber originally on Everest to document Brian Blessed's (ultimately botched) attempt at summiting, described the unsettling hallucinogenic effects of running out of oxygen in the Death Zone. The insides of his tent seemed to rise above him, taking on cathedral-like dimensions, robbing him of all strength, clouding his judgement. Any stay in the Death Zone without supplementary oxygen is like being slowly choked, all the while having to perform one of the hardest physical feats imaginable.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/blog_everest3.jpg

Lack of oxygen and treacherous terrain are not the only challenges on Everest, however. Ascents are very rarely attempted outside a very short window between May and June when conditions are at their absolute best, with average temperatures of -27 degrees celcius, and 50 mph winds. But Mount Everest is so high that the top actually penetrates into the troposphere, where winds known as Jet Streams can flow up to 200 mph, driving temperatures down to minus 73 degrees celcius.

Any exposed skin at high altitudes, even at the best of conditions, are prone to frost bite. A reaction to extreme cold, frost bite starts when blood vessels in the skin contract to preserve core body temperature, in conditions where normal blood flow would lead to the body cooling dangerously fast.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/frostbite1.jpg

Over time, if the exposed areas of skin are not heated, the lack of blood flow causes tissue death and, even if reheated, gangrene. At this stage, amputations are common. Climbers are by no means ignorant of these facts. They are reiterated in every source, in every article, and somehow adds to the dangerous allure of the mountain.
But in the words of David Brashears, five time summiteer of Everest, "there had been nothing in my training to prepare me to pass through the open graveyard waiting above."

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/beck-weathers01.jpg

Sudesh
08-12-2010, 02:53 PM
The case of Hannelore Schmatz is an infamous one. On October 2, 1979, after a successful summit, and for reasons unclear, she died of exhaustion 100 meters short of reaching Camp IV. For years, any climber attempting the southern route could see her body, sitting, leaning against her backpack with her eyes open and brown hair blowing in the wind. Despite being so exposed and so visible along the well-trodden climbing route, rescue operations are virtually suicidal in the Death Zone. A Nepalese police inspector and a Sherpa who tried to recover Hannelore's body in 1984 both fell to their deaths. It was finally high winds that blew her remains over the edge and down the Kangshung face.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/everestcorpse2.jpg

An area along the northeast route to the summit has earned the unassuming nickname of "Rainbow Valley", simply because of the multicolored down jackets of the numerous corpses littering the hillside. Even in the harsh conditions of lethal altitudes, corpses can remain for decades, some appearing frozen in time with climbing gear intact.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/everest-corpse3.jpg

Brashears explains, "Despite the snow and ice, Everest is as dry as a desert, the sun and wind quickly mummify human remains." The picture below serves as an example, it shows the corpse of mountaineer George Mallory, lost on Everest in 1924, and the state in which it was found in 1999 after 75 years exposed.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/dead-everest-2.jpg

Sudesh
08-12-2010, 02:54 PM
No study has ever been done on the causes of death on Everest, what it is that makes people sit down and give up sometimes within shouting distance of safety. But climbers refer to a kind of confrontation with fear that they experience at a certain point up the mountain. The realization that, not only will you not be able to help anyone else in trouble, but if you mess up, in any way, no one will likely be able to help you either.

Media term it "summit fever", the apparent callousness that drives mountaineers to disregard ethics on their Everest ascents, sometimes literally climbing over dead bodies to reach their goals. But whatever the preparation and outlandish cost, perhaps it's not simply ruthless determination that makes someone abandon their team mates, and yet still have the energy to summit. In such alien conditions, utterly hostile to human life, climbers might face their own mortality. Under the spectre of pure, unadulterated fear, they must realize that they are beyond help as well as beyond helping anyone else.

If they don't, they fall among those who never leave, abandoned on Everest.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v661/supine/blogstuff/everest-corpse-1.jpg

Online Documentaries:
Dark Side of Everest: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQJQapyHAQg
Dying For Everest: http://www.documentary-film.net/search/watch.php?&ref=132

Dragonlady
08-12-2010, 03:41 PM
Wow, speechless.

Ian

NSXGB
08-12-2010, 04:59 PM
That brought back memories of my journey home from work last Tuesday....

nobby
08-12-2010, 05:36 PM
Talk about depressing reading and pictures to boot! :eek:

jeeez :no:


Wow, speechless.

Ian

Dragonlady
08-12-2010, 06:06 PM
I know there are risks, but to leave people behind that are dead. Why can we not bring them home for a proper burial, and for their families to pay their last respects, especially with all the modern equipment we have to hand now?

Ian

JQD84983
08-12-2010, 07:30 PM
Nice post Sudesh. Very informative. Wont be finding me up there any time soon!

Sudesh
08-12-2010, 07:41 PM
I know there are risks, but to leave people behind that are dead. Why can we not bring them home for a proper burial, and for their families to pay their last respects, especially with all the modern equipment we have to hand now?

Ian

I wondered that myself, but it must be a very high and possibly fatal risk?? I have a friend uncle thats big into all this and must ask his opinion.

AR
08-12-2010, 08:00 PM
Sad but the weather, location and lack of oxygen make it nearly impossible to recuperate them.

TheSebringOne
08-12-2010, 09:04 PM
Mind blowing & shocking pictures!

Man's desire & obsession to reach the top of Everest can & will end in death. They know that approximately 1 in 10 won't return, they accept this fact before making the attempt.

That picture of Mallory's back & skin colour is haunting. I think the instrument they found on him was broke, so we will not know whether he actually made it to the top. Also I can't get my head around how basic his clothing & climbing equipment was, but then again, they are from the 1920s.

Justin
08-12-2010, 09:28 PM
There was a fantastic mallory programme covering this on terrestrial telly a couple years back - channel 4 maybe? Amazing seeming place, who knows what that would do to you mentally. I was a pathetic mess with altitude sickness when we ascended into the Rockies too quickly (driving, a shelby 'stang at that) so I couldn't even guess what that would be like.

Anyone see Into the Void?

Sudesh
08-12-2010, 09:44 PM
That bit about "Rainbow Valley" and Hannelore Schmatz is haunting to say the least.

Lankstarr
09-12-2010, 07:46 AM
Chilling... And i thought -4 was cold this morning!

gumball
09-12-2010, 01:18 PM
Silly sods.

Justin
09-12-2010, 01:57 PM
Silly sods.

They'd prolly say the same about us, I mean why is driving a car any more purposeful than mountaineering. If you presented those 2 hobbies to a group of school kids, which would they find the more interesting?

Lankstarr
09-12-2010, 03:19 PM
They'd prolly say the same about us, I mean why is driving a car any more purposeful than mountaineering. If you presented those 2 hobbies to a group of school kids, which would they find the more interesting?

Unless it was a school of geeks... Driving a supercar of course!

Senninha
10-12-2010, 08:26 PM
They'd prolly say the same about us, I mean why is driving a car any more purposeful than mountaineering. If you presented those 2 hobbies to a group of school kids, which would they find the more interesting?

But neither are as nuts as the freestyle climbers!!!!

http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:7ydDI54qmbGqnM:http://blog.pearltrees.com/wp-content/2009/03/freestyle_climbing_hi.jpg (http://www.google.co.uk/imgres?imgurl=http://blog.pearltrees.com/wp-content/2009/03/freestyle_climbing_hi.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.pearltrees.com/blog/%3Fp%3D1030&usg=__4_WuTB6yyB8mjCzkjzXEY8IT7U8=&h=333&w=499&sz=29&hl=en&start=2&zoom=1&tbnid=7ydDI54qmbGqnM:&tbnh=87&tbnw=130&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dfreestyle%2Bmountain%2Bclimbing%26um% 3D1%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN%26tbs%3Disch:1&um=1&itbs=1)

havoc
10-12-2010, 10:05 PM
They'd prolly say the same about us, I mean why is driving a car any more purposeful than mountaineering. If you presented those 2 hobbies to a group of school kids, which would they find the more interesting?
:yes:

Personally I find such people worthy of respect - to push your mind and body that far "just because it's there" is undeniably much harder physically and psychologically than even trackdaying a supercar.

I'd suggest only top-flight racers have that same combination, and even there their 'sport' has become rather sanitised and 'safe'...

dan the man
15-12-2010, 06:03 PM
On the link read all the posts below it. Great read and a heads up on things...