Aug. 6, 2008

How A K2 Mountain Climb Turned Tragic

11 Climbers Died In Latest Disaster On The World's Deadliest Mountain

  • Play CBS Video Video 11 Die In K2 Climb Tragedy

    The last survivor of an ill-fated expedition to the top of K2 was airlifted to safety after staying behind to help save others. Richard Roth reports on what went wrong.

    • Dutch climber Wilco Van Rooijen is seen in a bed of a military hospital where is was taken after being rescued from K-2's base camp, in Skardu, Pakistan, Aug. 4, 2008. Photo

      Dutch climber Wilco Van Rooijen is seen in a bed of a military hospital where is was taken after being rescued from K-2's base camp, in Skardu, Pakistan, Aug. 4, 2008.  (AP)

    • Climbers call K2 the world's deadliest mountain. Photo

      Climbers call K2 the world's deadliest mountain.  (CBS)

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(CBS)  There was menace even in K2's perfect weather at the start of the latest tragic climb, according to 23-year-old Californian Nick Rice, who was forced by frostbite to abandon his own effort to reach the top, reports CBS News correspondent Richard Roth.

"There was perfect visibility, actually almost too perfect, like something's going to go wrong," Rice said.

As a group of climbers approached the five-mile-high peak after midnight Friday, it did.

Along two paths, the climbers had begun their final push in early-morning darkness when a Serbian fell to his death and a Pakistani porter died trying to recover the body.

The others moved on to the summit, but time had cost them oxygen and energy, and their descent turned deadly.

An ice ledge suddenly sheared off the mountain face, cutting guide ropes, killing at least four climbers and stranding the rest in a place known as "the death zone."

The thin air was 40 below zero, and climbing down K2, it's said, is even harder than climbing up.

"By the time somebody gets to the summit of K2, they're exhausted," Rice said. "So coming down you're a bit clumsy. It's not a matter of technical skill anymore. It's a matter of being able to battle the deteriorating mindset that you've got-being able to have the stamina to survive."

Two Dutchmen did come out alive. And today, a Pakistani helicopter carried out the last survivor: an Italian climber who staggered down K2, weak and badly frostbitten from trying to help save others in the group. Instinct, he says, makes you want to do that.

Climbers call it the world's deadliest mountain. For every three who make it to the top, one dies trying.

On K2's makeshift shrine, 11 new names have just been added.


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Video and Galleries from CBS Evening News

Add a Comment
by sandycat2 August 6, 2008 10:55 PM PDT
A monument to the stupidity of mankind
Reply to this comment
by TommyCraig August 6, 2008 11:40 PM PDT
"A monument to the stupidity of mankind"
Posted by sandycat2 at 10:55 PM : Aug 06, 200
As much as I like challenges and new feats, I have to completely agree with you Sandycat2.
Reply to this comment
by akshat01-2009 August 7, 2008 5:07 AM PDT
"A monument to the stupidity of mankind"

tcandrews, sandycat, care to explain that to another stupid man?
Reply to this comment
by libsluv2spit August 7, 2008 6:55 PM PDT
tcandrews, sandycat, care to explain that to another stupid man?


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Posted by akshat01 at 05:07 AM : Aug 07, 2008
+ report abuse


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climbing K2 achieves nothing...its nothing more uplift one''s ego
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