WHITE OUT
Four Italian, Korean climbers found dead on Mont Blanc
Four Italian, Korean climbers found dead on Mont Blanc
by AFP Staff Writers
Lyon (AFP) Sept 10, 2024
Four climbers from Italy and South Korea were found dead on the Alps' highest peak of Mont Blanc on Tuesday after they had been missing for three days in bad weather, the local French prefecture said.

The mountaineers had "died of exhaustion", the Haute-Savoie prefecture told AFP, adding that rescuers who finally reached the site found the two Koreans first, close by the two Italians.

A helicopter from the PGHM mountain police based in Annecy was able to land at around 1:30 pm (1130 GMT) and found the bodies between 100 and 200 metres (330-660 feet) from the summit.

"The bodies have been brought down" from the mountain and "the families informed", the PGHM's Chamonix branch said.

A group of Italian mountain rescuers had reached the summit on foot after setting off in the morning but did not spot the bodies, the police added.

Police were alerted late on Saturday about "three missing climbing parties near the summit of Mont Blanc in very poor weather conditions".

The parties had set off "without guides", the prefecture said.

An intensive rescue effort retrieved two Koreans, who were alive, at 4,100 metres (13,450 feet) on Sunday morning.

But the weather later worsened, leaving rescuers unable to keep up the search for those still out on the mountain in subsequent days.

As late as Tuesday morning, a search helicopter had turned back from Mont Blanc as it could not find a way through clouds.

One senior PHGM commander told regional daily Le Dauphine Libere that they had briefly reached the Italians by phone and gleaned their location 4,600 metres up on Mont Blanc's north face, but that the connection had cut out.

At 4,809 metres, Mont Blanc is western Europe's highest peak and very popular with climbers from all over the world.

Related Links
It's A White Out at TerraDaily.com

Tweet

WHITE OUT
WashU scientists uncover hidden source of snow melt: Dark brown carbon
St. Louis, MO (SPX) Sep 05, 2024
Wildfires leave potent climate heaters behind in their wake, particles that enhance the absorption of sunlight and warm the atmosphere. Dropped on snow like a wool poncho, these aerosols darken and decrease the surface reflectance of snowy places. But it was not yet understood just how different types of smoke particles contribute to these effects. In a study recently published in npj Climate and Atmospheric Science, researchers at Washington University in St. Louis model how dark-brown carbon (d- ... read more

WHITE OUT
'Essential services' still sparse in Libya's flood-ravaged Derna

'Lost everything': survivor tells of deadly Vietnam landslide horror

Senegal migrant shipwreck death toll climbs to at least 26: navy

Trial removal of nuclear debris from Fukushima reactor begins

WHITE OUT
3D imaging technology unlocks new insights in plastic waste recycling

First Metal Part 3D Printed in Space Aboard ISS

Amazon to make major investment in UK in boost for new Labour govt

UN experts call for global system to trace critical minerals

WHITE OUT
Pacific Islands Forum targeted in 'cyber incident'

Unprecedented global study reveals cities receive more rainfall than surrounding rural areas

'Astonishing': Eaten eels recorded escaping from fish guts

Poland's weather agency warns most river levels low

WHITE OUT
Researchers explore cloud dynamics in the Arctic to enhance climate models

India launches flood warning systems at Himalayan glacial lakes

Finland's Lapland sees warmest summer on record

Greenland's Accelerated Warming Linked to Clear-Sky Radiation and Atmospheric Dynamics

WHITE OUT
AI-driven systems can cut energy usage in indoor farming by 25%, Cornell study shows

Peaches from Japan's Fukushima region sold at Harrods

'We are starving': Malawi villagers cook toxic yams to survive drought

Iraqi date farmers fight drought to protect national treasure

WHITE OUT
Vietnam evacuates 59,000 as toll from typhoon floods climbs to 82

Magnitude-6.3 quake strikes off Papua New Guinea

Floods hit millions in West and Central Africa

Death toll from 'exceptional' Morocco floods rises to 18

WHITE OUT
Hungary seeks foothold in restive Sahel as West pulls out

Imperilled Mali monument gets new lease of life

Burkina junta failing to stifle rising jihadist violence

China pushes smaller, smarter loans to Africa to shield from risks

WHITE OUT
New model sheds light on human dispersal phases across Europe

Nearly 200 land and environment defenders killed in 2023, says NGO

Islands play a key role in fostering language diversity

Over half of world population have social benefits, a first: UN