Showing posts with label Mount Everest. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mount Everest. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

MOUNT EVEREST



Mount Everest is the highest mountain on Earth as measured by

the height of its summit above sea level, which is 8848 meters.

The mountain, which is part of the Himalaya range in Asia,

is located on the border between Nepal and Tibet.

Everest was formed about 60 million years ago by the compression

that accompanied a collision of the Indian plate with the Eurasian plate.

The climate of Mount Everest is extremely cold.

As a result of its elevation, when the rain fall, it freezes into ice

and topples down the mountain. The atmospheric pressure at the

top of Everest is about a third of sea level pressure, meaning there is

about a third as much oxygen available to breathe as at sea level.

This makes it very difficult for climbers.





Climbers have dreamed of climbing to the top of the mountain

but few have conquered this near impossible task.

The first persons to scale the summit were Edmund Hillary from

New Zealand and Sherpa Tenzing Norgay from Nepal.

They reached the summit on May 29, 1953.

At that time, both acknowledged it as a team of effort by the

whole expedition, but Tenzing revealed a few years

later that Hillary had put his foot on the summit first.




Interesting Facts :


Mount Everest was named after Sir George Everest, a British Surveyor.

The Tibetan name for Mount Everest is Chomolungma or Qomolangma,

translated as “Mother of the Universe” or “Goddess Mother of the Earth”.

The Nepalese name of Everest is Sagarmatha meaning “Goddess of Sky.”

Thursday, January 1, 2009

How many dead bodies are up on Mount Everest?









Mount Everest is both the highest mountain and the highest graveyard in the world. As of 2002, 175 climbers had died on the mountain, and the vast majority of these bodies were left behind. There are reported to be at least 41 bodies on the north side of Everest.

Some people simply run out of gas on the trail and freeze to death in place. Others are consumed by avalanches. And, as veteran mountaineer David Breashears points out, removing dead bodies from this elevation is an enormous task.

Breashears describes how it took a team of 12 people eight hours to move the body of one dead Taiwanese man down a portion of the mountain. The high altitude, low oxygen, fierce winds, and intense cold make the trip extremely challenging even for an unencumbered person, so few climbers attempt to take the bodies of the deceased back with them.

Some bodies are lost forever on Everest. During the tragic May 1996 expeditions when eight people died in a freak storm near the summit, two of the bodies were never found. To further complicate matters, the local Sherpas, the people most adept at climbing the mountain and transporting gear up and back, are wary of dead bodies and don't like to go near them.