A few days ago I got an email from a man named Apa Tenzing
Sherpa, an Everest summiter and mountaineer. He called my attention to a web
page that he oversees via the
Climbing Gear Lab which posts helpful,
interesting and well-written articles about mountaineering and rock climbing
gear, technique as well as general geographical information. He asked if I’d be
interested in including a link to one of his articles on my blog* since it related
to my post on the Mount Everest Marathon. The article, entitled
Mount Everest Deaths Statistics by Year (1922-2019), is self-explanatory; it
summarizes the deaths over the past 100 years on Mount Everest alone. Since I
studied up on the dangers of high-altitude exposure and climbing in extreme weather
conditions for sections of my book
Running Everest, I am all too familiar with the risks; yet, people still die every year attempting
to summit (or descend) the highest mountain on earth. A decision to climb any
mountain should be considered and planned very carefully, and the articles from
the Climbing Gear Lab can help do just that.
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Mount Everest and neighboring peaks. Photo courtesy of Climbing Gear Lab |
*I did not receive any compensation for this post, but found not only the article on Everest deaths, but the entire website so interesting that I wanted to share it.
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