APPLETON, Wis., July 9, 2007

Missing Climber's Body Found In China

American Woman Disappeared In Avalanche Last November

    • The body of top female mountain climber Christine Boskoff, seen on Mount Rainier in Washington in this undated photo, was found last week after being lost in an avalanche in southern China last November. Both she and her climbing partner perished.

      The body of top female mountain climber Christine Boskoff, seen on Mount Rainier in Washington in this undated photo, was found last week after being lost in an avalanche in southern China last November. Both she and her climbing partner perished.  (AP Photo/Gordon Smith)

    • The body of Charlie Fowler, right, was found last December, but poor weather forced the cancellation of the search for Boskoff until May.

      The body of Charlie Fowler, right, was found last December, but poor weather forced the cancellation of the search for Boskoff until May.  (CBS)

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(CBS/AP)  The family of top female mountain climber Christine Boskoff confirmed Monday that her body has been found on a remote peak in northern China.

The search for her body recently resumed after snowy conditions forced efforts to be suspended over the winter. The body of her climbing partner, photographer Charlie Fowler, was recovered from high on the mountain in December.

Boskoff's passport and camera were found by her body late last week, said her mother, Joyce Feld, of Appleton, Wis. Her body won't be brought down from the 14,000-foot peak for about a month, until 15 rescuers can climb the rocky terrain to bring it down, Feld said. But Boskoff's body was covered with stones on Monday to protect it until then, she said.

The family had lost hope that Boskoff would return home alive after she and Fowler failed to return home as planned on Dec. 4.

"It's been a long time but it is a relief to know that they at least found the body," Feld said.

A memorial service will be held when Boskoff's body is returned.

Boskoff ascended six of the world's 26,000-plus-foot peaks, including Mount Everest. She owned Mountain Madness, a Seattle adventure travel company formerly owned by Scott Fischer, one of the guides who died on Mount Everest in the 1996 season portrayed in Jon Krakauer's best-selling book, "Into Thin Air."

“This latest news brings closure to what was a great loss for her family, friends, Mountain Madness and the climbing community," said Mark Gunlogson, president of Mountain Madness. "Chris lived life to the fullest and she died doing what she loved best in one of her most favorite places to climb.”

Fowler, who was from Colorado, was an expert on climbing in southwestern China. He guided climbers up Everest and climbed others of the world's tallest and most difficult peaks.

The two lived in Norwood, Colo.

Feld said her daughter died doing what she loved.

"Her dreams were doing something like this and she always did everything she wanted to," Feld said. "She crowded more things into her life than I did in my long life because she was always active."

A memorial fund in Boskoff’s name has been set up by Room to Read, which will build a school in Nepal in Boskoff’s honor.

© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by camboh82 July 10, 2007 12:35 AM EDT
To the first comment: she would not have to climb very high.
To the second comment: ya gotta follow your dreams. you can't live your life in fear. and it seems that that is the point of climbing, or anything adventurous: to conquer and survive what we thought we might not.
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by superdem July 9, 2007 8:26 PM EDT
I'm sorry, I just can't unerstand why people do such stupid things. This woman could have done things that actually helped someone else. Instead she left a grieving family consoling themselves that she died doing what she loved. Life hangs by a thread, it's a waste to do such things. They ought to just leave her up there and not spend a nickle bringing her or anybody else down. There should be a big sign at the foot of every mountain saying climb at your own risk - don't even call, no one is coming to help you.
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