鲍辫诲补迟别:听On Wednesday, June 4, rangers at Denali National Park located and recovered the body of Alex Chiu, 41, of Seattle, Washington. In a statement from the park, officials said Chiu fell approximately 3,000 vertical feet from the West Buttress Route. His body has been transferred to the Alaska state medical examiner.聽
A ski mountaineer is missing on Alaska鈥檚 20,310-foot Denali.
According to a , the 41-year-old skier, who hails from Washington State but has yet to be identified publicly, took a long, unroped fall on Monday, June 2, while on the West Buttress, the mountain鈥檚 standard route.
It was unclear if the missing climber鈥攚ho was on Denali with two companions鈥攚as climbing or descending the mountain when he fell, but the accident occurred at a location known as Squirrel Hill. The series of steep, windswept slopes which are frequently icy, are located at approximately 12,500 feet on the peak’s West Buttress.
According to the release, the skier fell off of this steep section and slid down and out of sight towards Peters Glacier, 鈥渁n exposed rocky and serac covered 3000-foot face.鈥 It鈥檚 unknown how far the climber ultimately fell, but when his partners rappelled down the face, they could neither see nor hear their fallen companion.
With no sign of their missing partner, the two survivors alerted search and rescue, and then descended the West Buttress route to Camp I at 7,800ft. As of Tuesday, June 3, the NPS reported that both ground and air search and rescue efforts for the missing climber were delayed 鈥渄ue to high winds and snow.鈥
Denali (recently federally designated as Mount McKinley by the Trump Administration), is North America鈥檚 highest mountain, and one of the Seven Summits. The peak鈥檚 climbing season traditionally lasts from late April to early July, and this year roughly 1,000 climbers have secured permits to attempt the peak (a number that has been consistent year-on-year since the coronavirus pandemic). Nearly half of these permitted climbers are on the mountain currently.
Although the West Buttress is considered the easiest and most accessible route on Denali鈥攁nd is the route chosen by over 90 percent of Denali hopefuls鈥攊t still entails a variety of hazards, including navigating crevasse-filled glaciers, climbing steep snow and ice slopes up 40 degrees, and surmounting a technical headwall rising from 14,200 to 16,200 feet, which is typically protected by fixed ropes. The average expedition up and down the mountain takes nearly three weeks.
The published by the NPS, reported that of the 1,001 climbers who set foot on the mountain, 34 patients were assessed by mountaineering rangers and patrol volunteers, and 25 of these were eventually evacuated. Three of these climbers died on the mountain, two from long falls, and a third from exposure after becoming stuck in a snow cave near the summit.