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Mount Everest claims the lives of 6 climbers in a week

Climbing Mount Everest is one of the greatest challenges known to man, but that doesn't stop scores of adrenaline seekers from trying to reach the top of the world.
Six people die in three days on Everest 02:03

KATHMANDU, Nepal -- Climbing Mount Everest is one of the greatest challenges known to man. It's certainly among the most perilous. At least six climbers have been killed in the past three days on the world's tallest mountain.

Death on Everest comes in many forms: from violence, to silence, avalanches, to heart stopping cold.

Two climbers die within days of each other on Mt. Everest 01:35

Last Thursday, a 25-year-old Nepalese guide fell to his death.

Since Friday, a Dutch climber, an Australian woman, and an Indian man, are suspected to have succumbed to altitude sickness: death by drowning, on a mountain 29,000 feet above sea level.

Altitude sickness can be mild or extremely serious, said Jim Davidson, who knows Everest's dangers well. He was there last year when an earthquake and avalanche killed 19 people.

"When it gets really bad it can get water pooling in your lungs, water pooling in your brain and it can be fatal in just a day or so when it strikes at a very serious level," he said.

Davidson says things have improved over the years.

"But we will never get the risk down to zero because it's a dangerous game and a lot of things can go wrong in high altitude," he said.

At sea level, oxygen makes up about 21 percent of air. At higher altitude, it's 21 percent as well, but in the thin air there are fewer oxygen molecules per breath. At 18,000 feet, one breath of air has half the amount of oxygen as at sea level.

Two expert Americans, Adrian Ballinger and Cory Richards, expected to summit Monday, are using live Snapchats to show the world the extremes climbers endure.

Since Tenzing Norgay and Edmund Hillary first conquered Everest in 1953, 4,000 climbers managed to do the same. But over 260 have died trying to reach the heavens.

On Monday, the bodies of two more Indian climbers were found.

Avalanches have taken an especially terrible toll on climbers, killing 35 in just the past two years. Since 1900, at least one person has died on Everest every year.

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