Timeline of Mount Everest expeditions

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Template:Short description

File:Everest-3D-Map-Type-EN.jpg
Mount Everest and surrounding terrain (rendered from data by US National Snow and Ice Data Center and Landsat 8)

Mount Everest is the world's highest mountain, with a peak at Template:Convert above sea level. It is situated in the Himalayan range of Solukhumbu district (Province 1 in present days), Nepal.[1]

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Timeline

File:Mount Everest Climbers Timeline01.svg
Climbers who have reached the summit of Everest divided by nationality of origin;

1921: Reconnaissance expedition

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The first British expedition[2]—organized and financed by the newly formed Mount Everest Committee—came under the leadership of Colonel Charles Howard-Bury, with Harold Raeburn as mountaineering leader, and included George Mallory, Guy Bullock, and Edward Oliver Wheeler.[3] It was primarily for mapping and reconnaissance to discover whether a route to the summit could be found from the north side. As Raeburn's health broke down, Mallory assumed responsibility for most of the exploration to the north and east of the mountain. He wrote to his wife: "We are about to walk off the map..." After five months of arduous climbing around the base of the mountain, Wheeler explored the hidden East Rongbuk Glacier and its route to the base of the North Col. On September 23, Mallory, Bullock, and Wheeler reached the North Col at Template:Convert before being forced back by strong winds.Template:Sfn To Mallory's experienced eye, the route up the North ridge intersecting the NE Ridge and from there to the summit looked long, but feasible for a fresher party.[3]

1922: First attempt

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The second British expedition, under General Charles Granville Bruce and climbing leader Lt-Col. Edward Lisle Strutt, and containing Mallory, returned for a full-scale attempt on the mountain. On May 21, they climbed to Template:Convert on the North Ridge before retreating. They were the first humans to climb above Template:Convert on a mountain. The scope of this accomplishment is reflected by the fact that there are only 14 mountains on Earth—the eight-thousanders—that reach and exceed 8,000 metres. At that moment, Mallory and Strutt had exceeded the summit of all but five other mountains on the planet.

A day later, George Finch and Geoffrey Bruce climbed up the North Ridge and Face to 8,321 m (27,300 ft) using oxygen for the first time. They climbed from the North Col to their highest camp at a phenomenal rate of 900 vertical feet per hour (275 vertical metres per hour), and were the first climbers to sleep using oxygen.

1924: Mallory and Irvine

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The third British expedition was led by Brigadier-General Charles Bruce, although becoming indisposed as a result of a flare-up of malaria, he relinquished leadership of the expedition to Lt-Col. Edward Norton, with Mallory promoted to climbing leader. Geoffrey Bruce, Howard Somervell, and John Noel returned from the previous year, along with newcomers Noel Odell and Andrew Irvine.

On June 2, Mallory and Bruce set off from the North Col (C-4) to make the first summit attempt. But extreme wind and cold, exhaustion, and the refusal of the porters to carry farther led Mallory to abandon the attempt and the next day the party returned to the North Col camp.

On June 4, Norton and Somervell attempted an oxygenless summit in perfect weather; throat trouble forced Somervell to abandon the climb at about Template:Convert while Norton continued on alone, reaching a height of 8,573 m (28,126 ft), just 275 m (900 ft) short of the summit. Exhausted, he turned back and rejoined Somervell for the descent.

On June 8, Mallory and Irvine left their high camp (C-6 at Template:Convert) to attempt the summit, using Irvine's modified oxygen apparatus. Odell, climbing in support below, wrote in his diary that at Template:Cvt he "saw Mallory & Irvine on the ridge, nearing base of final pyramid" climbing what he thought at the time was the very difficult Second Step at 12:50 pm. It was the last time the two were seen alive; whether either of them reached the summit remains a question still discussed and studied.

Back in England, the climbing establishment pressured Odell to change his view. After about six months he began to equivocate on which Step it was he saw them—from the Second to possibly the First. If the First, they had no chance of having reached the top; if the Second, they would have had about three hours of oxygen each and the summit was at least three hours away. It is conceivable (though unlikely) that Mallory might have taken Irvine's remaining oxygen and attempted to reach the summit.

One possible scenario is that the two reached First Step at about 10:30Template:Nbspam. Mallory, seeing the treacherous nature of the traverse to the Second Step, went it alone. He reconnoitered the base of the climbing crux and decided it was not for him that day. He returned, picked up Irvine and the two decided to climb the First Step for a look around and to photograph the complex approach to the Second Step. It was when climbing this small promontory that they were spotted from below by Odell, who assumed that, since they were ascending, they must therefore have been on the Second Step, although it is now difficult to believe that the two would still be climbing from so low down at a time—five hours late—that was considered to be the turn-around hour. Descending from the First Step, the two continued down when, at 2Template:Nbsppm, they were hit by a severe snow squall. Roping up, Mallory, leading, may have slipped, pulling himself and Irvine down. The rope must have caught to inflict severe rope-jerk injury around Mallory's (and presumably, Irvine's) waist. Some researchers believe Irvine was able to stay high and struggle along the crest of the NE Ridge another 100 yards, only to succumb to cold and possible injuries of the fall. Others believe that the two became separated after the fall by the near white-out conditions of the squall. Based on his final location, it would seem that Mallory had continued straight down in search of his partner, while Irvine, also injured, might have continued diagonally down through the Yellow Band.

In 1979, climber Wang Hongbao of China revealed to the climbing leader of a Japanese expedition that in 1975, while taking a stroll from his bivouac he had discovered "an English dead" at Template:Convert, roughly below the site of Irvine's ice axe discovered in 1933 near the NE Ridge. Wang was killed in an avalanche the next day before he could provide additional details.

In 1999, Conrad Anker of the Mallory and Irvine Research Expedition found Mallory's body in the predicted search area near the old Chinese bivouac. There are opposing views within the mountaineering community as to whether the duo may have reached the summit 29 years before the first successful ascent by Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay in 1953. Many theories regarding the success of Mallory and Irvine's summit assault exist.

One theory amongst those supporting the summit push has Mallory overcoming the difficulty of the sheer face of the Second Step by standing on Irvine's shoulders. Armed with Irvine's remaining 3/4-full oxygen tank he could conceivably have reached the summit late in the day, but this would have meant that Irvine would have had to descend by himself. However, rope-jerk injuries around Mallory's waist must mean the two were roped when they fell from below the First Step. Others suggest based on subsequent free climbs that Mallory would have been able to free climb the step. 1960s Chinese Everest climber Xu Jing told Eric Simonson and Jochen Hemmleb in 2001 that he recalled spotting a corpse somewhere in the Yellow Band. One researcher claimed to have finally spotted Irvine's body using microscopic examination of aerial photographs. This possible discovery set off a new round of search expeditions in 2010 and 2011. Irvine's foot was found in the Central Rongbuk Glacier in 2024.[4]

1933

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". A major expedition, under the leadership of Hugh Ruttledge, set out to climb with the great expectations that this time they would succeed. Oxygen was taken but not used because of the incorrect but lingering belief that it was of little benefit to a properly acclimated climber. After delays caused by poor weather and illness of team members, a much higher assault camp was placed than in 1924. On the first summit attempt, Lawrence Wager and Percy Wyn-Harris intended to follow the Northeastern ridge, but were unable to regain it, having bypassed (rather than climb over) the First Step, which they reached at 7:00Template:Nbspam. The direct access to the Second Step from the First involves a treacherous traverse. Instead of taking it, they dropped down to follow the lower, easier traverse pioneered by Norton in 1924. Observing the Second Step from Template:Convert below it, Wyn-Harris declared it "unclimbable." Shortly after crossing the Great Couloir, they turned back for poor snow conditions and the lateness of the hour. A subsequent attempt by Eric Shipton and Frank Smythe followed the same route but Smythe, who pressed on alone when Shipton turned back because of illness, got no higher.[5]

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Lucy, Lady Houston, a British millionaire former showgirl, funded the Houston Everest Flight of 1933, which saw a formation of airplanes led by the Marquess of Clydesdale fly over the summit in an effort to photograph the unknown terrain.[6][7]

1934

  • Template:Flagicon Maurice Wilson, a British eccentric, stated his intention to summit Everest by himself. After only a few flying lessons, Wilson flew illegally from Britain to India, hiking through Darjeeling and into Tibet and with the help of Sherpa guides began his attempt. Wilson was not a climber and had no climbing equipment. He expected to transport himself to the summit with spiritual help and signal the monks at the Rongbuk monastery of his success with a shaving mirror. It is not believed he attained the North Col (7000 m). Maurice Wilson's body and his diary were found wrapped in a tent in 1935 by another British expedition. Although dumped into a crevasse below the North Col, his body has been rediscovered a number of times, including in 1960 by the Chinese expedition. Unlike Mallory's body, Wilson's has decayed because the temperature at the head of the East Rongbuk Glacier does rise above freezing.[8][9][10][11]

1935

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

  • Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon Shipton led a small reconnaissance expedition during the monsoon season in preparation for the following year's expedition. The team climbed smaller peaks in the vicinity of Everest, and examined alternative possible routes on the mountain, including the West Ridge, and entry into the Western Cwm via Lho La. Both were dismissed as impractical, though Shipton did decide that an ascent from the Western Cwm would be possible if entry from the Nepalese side could be made. This would be the route by which the mountain would eventually be climbed in 1953. The expedition is also notable as the first visit to Everest for Tenzing Norgay, who was engaged as one of the 'porters'.Template:Sfn

1936

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

1938

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

  • Template:Flagicon After taking part in the 1935 reconnaissance expedition, the prolific British mountaineering explorer Bill Tilman was appointed leader of the 1938 Everest expedition which attempted the ascent via the North Col but making an attempt from the west, from the main Rongbuk Glacier, as well as from the East Rongbuk. The North Col was reached from the west for the first time and the team went on to over Template:Convert without supplemental oxygen before being forced down by bad weather and sickness.Template:Sfn[13]

1947

1950

  • Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon Nepal opened its borders to foreigners. Earlier expeditions had attempted the mountain from Tibet, via the north face. However, this access was closed to western expeditions in 1950, after the Chinese took control over Tibet.

In 1950, Bill Tilman and a small party which included Charles Houston, Oscar Houston, and Betsy Cowles undertook an exploratory expedition to Everest through Nepal along the route which has now become the standard approach to Everest from the south.

1951

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

  • Template:Flagicon A British expedition led by Shipton, and including Edmund Hillary, Tom Bourdillon, W. H. Murray, and Mike Ward travelled into Nepal to survey a new route via the southern face. On September 30 at Template:Convert on Pumori, Shipton and Hillary saw the whole of the Western Cwm and concluded that ascent was possible from the top of the Cwm to the west face of Lhotse followed by a traverse to the South Col. They spent the next month attempting to reach the Western Cwm through the Khumbu Icefall but were stopped just short of success when an insurmountable crevasse (Template:Cvt wide) blocked further progress near the top of the icefall. Murray wrote: "We were defeated".Template:Sfn
  • Template:Flagicon Template:Ill along with two Sherpas attempted the North col but turned back because of rockfall. He had no mountaineering experience and minimal equipment. First European to reach Nangpa La.[15]

1952

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

  • Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon A Swiss expedition led by Edouard Wyss-Dunant attempted to climb via the South Col and the southeast ridge. After five days of effort, the team found a route through the icefall; they got past the crevasse that stymied the 1951 expedition by first descending Template:Cvt into it to a snow bridge and then used a precarious rope bridge to reach the other side. They were the first people to stand in the Western Cwm. On May 27, four climbers (Raymond Lambert, Tenzing Norgay, Rene Aubert, and Leon Flory) started from their tents on the South Col, two teams of Lambert/Tenzing and Aubert/Flory. Lambert/Tenzing reached Camp VII first at Template:Convert followed by Aubert/Flory. The tent was too small for both teams and Aubert/Flory decided to return to the South Col. The team had only undergone the ascent for reconnaissance and so only one tent and a bit of food had been taken. On May 28 in unsettled weather, the final assault team of Lambert and Tenzing turned back Template:Convert short of the south summit.Template:Sfn
  • Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon The Swiss attempted another expedition in the autumn of 1952 under the lead of Gabriel Chevalley. Besides Chevalley, the team included again Lambert and Tenzing from the spring expedition, as well as five new climbers. In late November, the team was stopped by bad weather after reaching an altitude of Template:Convert.[16]
  • Template:Flagicon Several Western climbing journals reported that the Soviet Union had launched an attempt from Tibet in October with the aim of reaching the summit before the following year's British expedition. The alleged expedition, apparently led by Pavel Datschnolian, was said to have been a disaster, resulting in the deaths of Datschnolian and five other men. Both Russian and Chinese authorities have consistently denied that such an attempt took place; no physical evidence has ever been found to confirm its existence, nor is there any record of a person named Pavel Datschnolian.Template:Sfn[17]

1953: Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

  • Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon Template:Flagicon In 1953, a ninth British expedition, led by John Hunt and organized and financed by the Joint Himalayan Committee, returned to Nepal. Hunt planned for three assaults of two climbers each, including "a third and last attempt" if necessary after a delay of some days.Template:Sfn After Wilfrid Noyce and Annullu had forced a passage to the South Col, two climbing pairs previously selected by Hunt attempted to reach the summit. The first pair, Charles Evans and Tom Bourdillon, using closed-circuit oxygen sets[18] achieved the first ascent of the Template:Convert South Summit, within as little as Template:Convert of the final summit, but could go no further because of oxygen equipment problems and lack of time.[19] Two days later, the second assault was made with the fittest and most determined climbing pair. Using conventional open-circuit oxygen sets, the summit was eventually reached at 11:30 am local time on May 29, 1953, by the New Zealander Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay, a Nepali, climbing the South Col route. They paused at the summit to take photographs, Hillary saying after ten minutes taking photographs on the summit without his oxygen set on that he "was becoming rather clumsy-fingered and slow-moving".Template:Sfn They buried a few sweets and a small cross in the snow before descending. Although they characterized it as the culmination of a team effort by the whole expedition, there was intense public speculation as to which of the pair had set foot on the summit first. In 1955 Tenzing disclosed in his autobiography that it was Hillary. News of the expedition's success reached London on the morning of Queen Elizabeth II's coronation. Times reporter James Morris sent a coded message by runner to Namche Bazaar, where a wireless transmitter was used to relay the message to London. The conquest of Everest was probably the last major news item to be delivered to the world by runner. Returning to Kathmandu a few days later, Hillary and Hunt discovered that they had been knighted for their efforts.

1954 and 1955: French and Swiss Expeditions (proposed)

1956: Swiss Expedition

1960: The North Ridge

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

  • Template:Flagicon On May 25, a Chinese team consisting of Wang Fuzhou, Qu Yinhua, and a Tibetan, Gongbu (Konbu), claimed to have reached the summit via the North Ridge.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Owing to the lack of photographic evidence, the Chinese claim was discounted in mountaineering circles. However, subsequent research and interviews have persuaded many experts that the Chinese did indeed climb Everest from the north in 1960.[21][22]

1962

  • Template:Flagicon Woodrow Wilson Sayre and three colleagues made an illegal incursion into China from Nepal and reached about Template:Convert on the North Ridge before turning back from exhaustion. The attempt was documented in a book by Sayre entitled Four Against Everest.[23]

1963

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

1965

1969

  • Template:Flagicon Two reconnaissance expeditions were undertaken in preparation for the summit expedition of 1970. Their primary objective was to scout the yet unclimbed southwestern face. On October 31, after establishing several camps on the southwestern face, a maximum elevation of Template:Convert was reached.[28]

1970

1971

1972

1973

1974

1975

  • Template:Flagicon On May 16, Junko Tabei of Japan became the first woman on the summit. Tabei was one of seven Japanese climbers injured in an avalanche at Camp II on May 4.[33] Tabei and her climbing partner, Sherpa Ang Tshering I, were the 38th/39th unique individuals to complete the ascent.[34] In 1992, Tabei became the first woman to complete the Seven Summits.[35]
  • Template:Flagicon On May 27, nine members from a Chinese team reached the summit. The team fixed a ladder at the Second Step, the major obstacle on the North Ridge route, which continued to be in use until 2008.[36] Phanthog became the first woman to ascend from the Tibetan side.[37] In the expedition, the summit's altitude was measured as Template:Convert.[38]
  • Template:Flagicon 1975 British Mount Everest Southwest Face expedition - On September 24, a British expedition led by Chris Bonington achieved the first ascent of the Southwest Face. Summiteers Doug Scott and Dougal Haston made the first ascent by British citizens.[39] A band of cliffs on the southwest face, known as the Rock Band, had defeated five previous expeditions between 1969 and 1973. On September 20, Nick Estcourt and Paul Braithwaite achieved the first ascent of the Rock Band. The summit was reached by two teams: first on September 24 by Scott and Haston, who survived the highest ever bivouac when they were benighted on the South Summit during their descent. On September 26 four more climbers attempted a second ascent. Peter Boardman and Sirdar Pertemba Sherpa were successful, but BBC cameraman Mick Burke, climbing alone after Martin Boysen turned back, failed to return from the summit.[40]

1976

1978

1979

1980: First winter ascent

1982

  • Template:Flagicon The first acknowledged Soviet expedition climbed a new route on the Southwest Face to the left of the Central Gully.Template:Sfn Eleven climbers reached the summit, and the route was recognized as technically the hardest route yet climbed on Everest.[49]
  • Template:Flagicon A small British expedition led by Bonington made the first attempt to climb the full length of the northeast ridge (the Chinese route gained the ridge at a high point via the north face). The summit was not reached, and Peter Boardman and Joe Tasker disappeared while making a final attempt to climb the Three Pinnacles at over 8000 m.Template:Sfn
  • Template:Flagicon One of the best planned, equipped, and financed attempts took place in October when the 1982 Canadian Mount Everest Expedition arrived. Tragedy struck early; after the expedition's cameraman died in an icefall and three Sherpas died soon after in an avalanche, six of the Canadian team members quit. One of the remaining members, Laurie Skreslet along with two Sherpas, made it to the top on October 5, becoming the first Canadian to reach the summit; two days later, Pat Morrow became the second Canadian to do the same.Template:Sfn
  • Template:Flagicon May 15 – Marty Hoey fell to her death from the North Side. Hoey was widely expected to become the first American woman to summit Everest, which did not occur for another six years (see September 29, 1988).[48]
  • Template:Flagicon December 27 – Everest veteran Yasuo Kato made the second winter ascent and became the first climber to summit Everest in three different seasons. He climbed alone from the South Summit. On his descent, he and his climbing companion Toshiaki Kobayashi bivouacked below the south summit. They failed to return in bad weather.[50]

1983

  • Template:Flagicon October 8 – Lou Reichardt, Kim Momb, and Carlos Buhler became the first to summit the East Face.[48] The next day, Dan Reid, George Lowe, and Jay Cassell reached the summit.

1984

  • Template:Flagicon April 20 – Bulgarian Hristo Prodanov reached the summit via the West Ridge, alone and without oxygen, and died on the way back, becoming the first Bulgarian who summited Mount Everest and the second to summit via the West Ridge. On May 8–9, another four members, Metodi Savov and Ivan Valchev, on May 8; Nikolay Petkov and Kiril Doskov on May 9, reached the summit via the West Ridge route and descended the South Col route, doing the second ever traverse of Everest, and the first complete - two of the ridges of the mountain.
  • Template:Flagicon May 23 – Bachendri Pal via the standard southeast ridge route, becoming the first Indian woman to do so.[48]
  • Template:Flagicon October 3 – First Australian ascent, without supplemental oxygen, on a new route ("White Limbo") on the North Face. Tim Macartney-Snape and Greg Mortimer summitted.
  • Template:Flagicon October 20 – Phil Ershler became the first American to summit Everest's North Face.[51]
  • Template:Flagicon October 15 – First Slovak & Czechoslovak ascent. Zoltán Demján and Jozef Psotka summitted without supplemental oxygen, climbing a new route variant over the South Pillar. Psotka died on the descent.

1985

1986

  • Template:Flagicon Erhard Loretan and Jean Troillet climbed the North Face in a single push without oxygen, ropes, or tents in 42 hours, then glissaded down in under five hours. They climbed mostly at night and carried no backpacks above 8000 m, a style that became known as "night naked".
  • Template:Flagicon Sharon Wood becomes the first North American (Canadian) woman to summit, on May 20 with Dwayne Congdon.

1988

  • Template:Flagicon Jean-Marc Boivin of France makes the first paraglider descent of the mountain.[54] Boivin's 11–12 minute, Template:Convert descent to Camp II holds the altitude record for start of a paraglider flight.[55]
  • Template:Flagicon Marc Batard completed the southeast route ascent without supplementary oxygen in the record time of 22 hours and 30 minutes from Base Camp to summit.[56]
  • Template:FlagiconTemplate:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon On May 5, a joint team from China, Japan, and Nepal reached the top from the north and the south simultaneously and crossed over to descend from the opposite sides. This event was broadcast live worldwide.[57]
  • Template:Flagicon September 29 – Stacy Allison became the first American woman atop Everest.[48]
  • Template:Flagicon 16 October – Lydia Bradey, New Zealand, became the first woman to climb Everest without oxygen, via the SE ridge, climbing alone. Initially two of her teammates (who were not at base Camp at the time) disputed her claim but since then the ascent has been recognised by several governments and the Himalayan Data Base (Nepal).
  • Template:Flagicon 17 OctoberJozef Just, Slovakia, became the first and only climber to climb Bonington's SW Face route without oxygen, after reaching South Summit with teammates Dušan Becík, Peter Božík and Jaroslav Jaško. Team was exhausted after last bivouac under South Summit and Just went to summit Everest solo, while other three began to descend towards South Col. After rejoining and their last radio contact with base camp they disappeared in strong storm and their bodies had never been found. Slovak expedition had two main objectives – to summit Lhotse and repeat British route – so Just and Becík also summited Lhotse 19 days before tragedy.[58][59]
  • Template:Flagicon On 10 May 1988, Sungdare Sherpa became the first person to summit Everest five times. Sungdare first summitted on 2 October 1979.[34]
  • Template:FlagiconTemplate:FlagiconTemplate:FlagiconOn 12 May 1988, Stephen Venables became the first Briton to summit Everest without oxygen, alone. Team leader Robert Anderson and Ed Webster reached the South Summit. All three, with Paul Teare, had climbed a new route up the Kangshung Face to the South Col, with no oxygen and no high altitude porters.[60]
  • Template:Flagicon In 1988, Jon Muir became the first Australian to reach the summit without a sherpa.[61]

1989

1990

1992

  • Template:Flagicon Two rival Chilean expeditions; one led by Rodrigo Jordan climbing the second ever ascent through the Kangshung, and the other led by Mauricio Purto became the first South Americans to reach the summit. The first Chilean and South American climber to set foot on the summit was Cristian Garcia-Huidobro at 10:25 on May 15, who is claimed to have insulted and mocked the rival team's leader, Purto, as he reached the summit on the second place. Supposedly a member of Purto's team pushed Garcia-Huidobro enticing him to fight, if this quarrel ever took place it has the dubious honour of being the highest brawl in the world.

1993

1995

1996

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". In 1996, fifteen people died trying to reach the summit, making it the deadliest year in Everest history. On May 10, a storm stranded several climbers between the summit and the safety of Camp IV, killing Rob Hall, Scott Fischer, Yasuko Namba, Doug Hansen, and guide Andy Harris on the south and the Indian (Ladakhi) climbers Tsewang Paljor, Dorje Morup, Tsewang Smanla on the north. Hall and Fischer were both highly experienced climbers who were leading paid expeditions to the summit.

Journalist Jon Krakauer, on assignment from Outside magazine, was in Hall's party. He published the bestseller Into Thin Air about the experience. Anatoli Boukreev, a guide who felt impugned by Krakauer's book, co-authored a rebuttal book called The Climb. The dispute sparked a large debate within the climbing community. In May 2004, Kent Moore, a physicist, and John L. Semple, a surgeon, both researchers from the University of Toronto, told New Scientist magazine that an analysis of weather conditions on that day suggested that freak weather caused oxygen levels to plunge approximately 14%.[68][69]

During the same season, climber and filmmaker David Breashears and his team filmed the IMAX feature Everest on the mountain (some climbing scenes were later recreated for the film in British Columbia, Canada). The 70 mm IMAX camera was specially modified to be lightweight enough to carry up the mountain, and to function in the extreme cold with the use of particular greases on the mechanical parts, plastic bearings and special batteries. Production was halted as Breashears and his team assisted the survivors of the May 10 disaster, but the team eventually reached the top on May 23 and filmed the first large format footage of the summit. On Breashears' team was Jamling Tenzing Norgay, the son of Norgay, following in his father's footsteps for the first time. Also on his team was Ed Viesturs of Seattle, WA, who summited without the use of supplemental oxygen, and Araceli Segarra, who became the first woman from Spain to summit Everest.

The storm's impact on climbers on the mountain's other side, the North Ridge, where several climbers also died, was detailed in a first hand account by British filmmaker and writer Matt Dickinson in his book The Other Side of Everest.

  • Template:Flagicon Sherpa Ang Rita was the first person to summit ten times, between 7 May 1983 through 23 May 1996.
  • Template:Flagicon Hans Kammerlander climbed the mountain from the north side in the record ascent time of 17 hours from base camp to the summit. He climbed alone without supplementary oxygen and skied down from 7,800 metres.[56]
  • Template:Flagicon Göran Kropp of Sweden became the first person to ride his bicycle all the way from his home in Sweden to the mountain, scale it alone without the use of oxygen tanks, and bicycle most of the way back.
  • Template:Flagicon Lene Gammelgaard became the first Scandinavian woman to summit Mount Everest,[70] reaching the summit via the South East Ridge on 10 May 1996, as part of Scott Fischer's tragic expedition.

1998

1999

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

  • Template:Flagicon The claimed fastest oxygen-supported ascent over the southeast ridge (South Col) was Nepalese Pemba Dorji Sherpa's 2004 climb, taking 8 hours 10 minutes for the Template:Cvt route from base camp to the summit.[88] Pemba's record-claim was subject to an unprecedented dispute by renowned Mt Everest chronicler Elizabeth Hawley and other mountaineers in Nepal.[90][91] Pemba was later arrested and jailed for his alleged involvement in a swindling scandal unrelated to Mt Everest.[92] In 2017, Pemba Dorje's record was rejected and removed by the Nepal Government. [1] [2] [3] [4] Also on this climb Robert Jen became the first Asian American to climb Mt Everest.
  • Template:Flagicon A 13-man Russian expedition led by Template:Interlanguage link climbed Everest via the North Face, team members summited between May 29 and June 1, 2004.[93]
  • Template:Flagicon First Greek expedition, led 5 climbers to the summit from the South side and 3 from the North.

2005

  • Template:Flagicon A Chinese government-sponsored survey team with 24 members reached the peak on May 22 to anchor surveying equipment for the remeasurement of summit height. Several methods were used to assess snow and ice thickness for the new measurement and to compare it with historical data.[94]
  • Template:Flagicon On May 14, a Eurocopter AS-350 B3 helicopter flew and landed on the summit for the first time, repeating the feat the next day.[95]
  • Template:Flagicon The first couple married on top of the Everest was Mr. Pem Dorjee Sherpa and Ms. Moni Mulepati from Nepal on May 30, 2005. Both were part of the Rotary Centennial Everest Expedition.

2006

  • Template:Flagicon On May 15, the New Zealander Mark Inglis became the first person to reach the summit with two artificial legs.
  • On May 15, sportsman Maxime Chaya was the first Lebanese to climb Mount Everest completing the Seven Summits challenge. On December 28, 2007, he also became the first from the Middle East to reach the South Pole on foot from the Antarctic coast after an unsupported and unassisted journey that lasted 47 days.
  • Template:Flagicon On May 17, 70-year-old Takao Arayama reached the peak, becoming the oldest man by three days to reach the summit.[31]
  • Template:Flagicon On May 17, 32-year-old Leo Oracion became the first Filipino to reach the summit. He was part of the First Philippine Mount Everest Expedition along with fellow mountaineer Erwin "Pastor" Emata, who reached the summit the following day, May 18. The expedition was supported by TV network ABS-CBN.[96] Another Filipino, Romi Garduce reached the summit on May 19. He was financed and supported by TV network GMA 7.[97] Dale Abenojar, another Filipino mountaineer who made an independent summit attempt, claimed to have reached the summit on May 15—two days ahead of Oracion—from the northern side. Abenojar's claim has been registered in Elizabeth Hawley's Himalayan Database but the claim remains dubious.[98]
  • Template:Flagicon On May 18th at 7.45am, Tom and Ben Clowes, became the first British Brothers to stand on the summit together having climbed from the southern side in Nepal.
  • Template:Flagicon On May 19, Apa Sherpa of Thame, Nepal summited for the 16th time, breaking his own world record.
  • Template:Flagicon Also on May 19, Sophia Danenberg became the first black American and the first black woman to reach the summit.[99]
  • Template:Flagicon Pauline Sanderson became the first person to complete a self-propelled ascent of Mount Everest, the highest point on the earth's surface, starting from the Dead Sea, at Template:Convert the lowest point on the earth's surface.[100][101] Sanderson began her approximately Template:Convert "EverestMax" expedition six months earlier, by bicycle, from the shore of the Dead Sea in Jordan.[102] (Sanderson's husband, Phil, joined her for the final ascent, making them the first married British couple to summit Everest together.)[102]

2007

  • Template:Flagicon On May 16, Apa Sherpa climbed Everest for the 17th time, breaking his own record.
  • Template:Flagicon On 15 and 16 May, 25 members, including 13 sherpas, of the Indian Army Everest Expedition 2007, scaled Mount Everest. This was the fourth expedition by the Indian Army to Everest; but the first from Tibet side.[103][104][105]
  • Template:Flagicon On May 17, Omar Samra became the first Egyptian and youngest Arab to reach the summit of Everest, at 7:19 EGP.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
  • Template:Flagicon On May 22, Katsusuke Yanagisawa became the oldest person to reach the summit at 71 years and 61 days.[106]
  • Template:Flagicon On May 24, Kenton Cool reached the summit for the second time in a week.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
  • On May 17, first traverse by three women, Noelle Wenceslao, Carina Dayondon, and Janet Belarmino (Filipina) coming North Side, Tibet and going down in South Side, Nepal.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
  • Template:Flagicon The fastest ascent via the northeast ridge was accomplished by Austrian climber Christian Stangl, who took 16 hours 42 minutes for the 10 km distance from Camp III (Advanced Base Camp) to the summit, just barely beating Italian Hans Kammerlander's record of 17 hours, accomplished in 1996.[107][108] Both men climbed alone. In 2010, Stangl was proven, and later confessed to, having claimed a fraudulent summit-climb of K2 in 2010.[109][110][111]

2008

2009

  • Template:Flagicon On May 16, Apa Sherpa climbed Everest for the 19th time, once again breaking his own record.
  • Template:Flagicon On May 19, Darija Boštjančić and Iris Boštjančić became the first pair of sisters to simultaneously climb Everest, also making Croatia the only country in the world with more female than male summiteers.[116]
  • Template:Flagicon On May 20, Korean climbers Park Young-seok, Jin Jae-chang, Kang Ki-seok and Shin Dong-min reached the summit of Everest via a new route on the Southwest face (Park's Korean Route)[117]
  • Template:Flagicon Ranulph Fiennes on 20 May; aged 65y, the oldest Briton to summit (on his third attempt).

2010

  • Template:Flagicon The youngest person to climb Mount Everest was 13-year-old Jordan Romero in May 2010 from the Tibetan side.[118] His ascent, as part of an apparent "race" to bring younger and younger children to the mountain (shortly after Romero's ascent, Pemba Dorjie Sherpa announced plans to bring his 9-year-old son to the summit[119]), triggered a wave of criticism that prompted Chinese authorities to establish age limits on Mount Everest. At the present time, China no longer grants permits to prospective climbers under 18 or over 60. Nepal sets the minimum age at 16 but has no maximum age.[120] Romero later became the youngest person to climb the Seven Summits at 15 years old, 200 days.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
  • The oldest climber to reach the summit of Mount Everest from both sides (Nepal and Tibet) of the mountain is 60-year-old Julio Bird, a Puerto Rican cardiologist who reached the summit of Mount Everest from the north side on 17 May 2010.[121]

2011

2012

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2013

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

2014

2015

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

  • April 2015 Nepal earthquake triggered an avalanche on Mount Everest, killing at least 18 people at South Base Camp;[125][126] an Indian Army mountaineering team reportedly recovered 18 bodies.[127] Between 700 and 1,000 people were thought to be on the mountain at the time, with at least 61 injured and an unknown number missing or trapped at camps at higher altitudes.[126][127][128][129][130]
  • August 2015: Everest was reopened to climbers in August, but only one climbing permit was issued, to Japanese mountaineer Nobukazu Kuriki. He turned around 700m below the summit in October (in the autumn post-monsoon season). He had tried four times previously, losing all his fingers to frostbite.[131]

2016

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2017

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2018

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2020

The Nepalese government announced on 13 March 2020 that it was suspending all climbing permits for Mount Everest and all other peaks in the country due to concern over the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic; the Chinese government has already closed its side of Everest.[132]

On 3 April 2020 it was announced that more than two dozen Chinese climbers were tackling Mount Everest and were expected to reach the advanced base camp on Friday, although only Chinese climbers would be permitted in the spring season.[133]

2021

The Chinese side of Everest remained closed to foreigners, however, the Nepalese government resumed issuing climbing permits (issuing a total of 408).[134] Additionally, the Nepalese government imposed a limit on the number of climbers who could be on Everest at any one time, to prevent 'traffic jams' of climbers on the mountain.[135]

During the season, there were several outbreaks of COVID-19 among climbers, compounded by the Nepalese Department of Tourism neglecting to establish any rules or regulations to mitigate the risk of outbreaks at the South Base Camp.[136][135] Furthermore, the Nepalese government did not officially acknowledge any cases or outbreaks of COVID on Mount Everest,[135][137][138] and there were prohibitions enforced about what climbers were allowed to take photographs of,[135][137][139] prompting concerns about the Nepalese government attempting to cover up these problems.[135][137]

In May 2021, citing concerns about COVID, the Chinese government announced plans to draw a 'separation line' at the peak of Everest, to prevent the spread of COVID from climbers whom ascended from the Nepalese side.[138]

Over the 2021 season, a total of 534 people summitted Everest (195 members, 339 sherpas), and four people died.[137]

2022

Once again, the Chinese government prohibited foreign expeditions on the north face of Everest, and only permitted one commercial expedition and one scientific expedition to climb Everest, with the scientific expedition installing a series of weather stations on the north face of Everest. The Nepalese side remained open, with 325 climbing permits issued - a sharp decline from 2022, in spite of attempts to attract more foreign climbers, such as removing COVID testing requirements on arrival in Nepal for vaccinated travellers.[140][141] Coincidentally, a new weather station was installed on the south face of Everest as well, at roughly the same altitude as the highest-altitude Chinese weather station, to replace another weather station on the Nepalese side which broke down in January 2020 - neither expedition was aware of each other until after the stations were installed.[142]

Towards the end of the season, due to a stalled high-pressure system, conditions on Everest were better than usual, being warmer, drier, and less windy, facilitating a higher-than-usual summitting success rate of 70%.[140]

Over the 2022 season, a total of 690 people summitted Everest (640 from the south (240 members, 400 sherpas), 50 from the north), and three people died.[140]

Timeline of regional, national, ethnic, and gender records

1975

  • Template:Flagicon On May 16, Junko Tabei of Japan became the first woman on the summit. Tabei was one of seven Japanese climbers injured in an avalanche at Camp II on May 4.[33] Tabei and her climbing partner, Sherpa Ang Tshering I, were the 38th/39th unique individuals to complete the ascent.[34] In 1992, Tabei became the first woman to complete the Seven Summits.[35]
  • Template:Flagicon On May 27, a Tibetan woman, Phanthog, became the first woman to reach the summit from the Tibetan side. Tabei's team had used the South Col route.[33]

1977

1978

1979

1980

1982

1984

1985

1986

  • Template:Flagicon Sharon Wood reaches the summit on May 20 thus becoming the first woman from North America and Canada to reach the top. Starting from the Rongbuk Glacier, her route went up to the West Shoulder of Everest and then followed the Hornbein Couloir to the summit.[146]

1988

1989

1990

1992

1993

1995

1996

  • Template:Flagicon Clara Sumarwati was the first Indonesian to reach the summit on September 26, 1996, according to the record of Everest Summiteers Association. [Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".]

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

  • Template:Flagicon 16-05-2004 In an expedition under Panayiotis Kotronaros and Paul Tsiantos leadership, George Voutyropoulos became the first Greek climber to the top, followed by Panayiotis Kotronaros, Paul Tsiantos, Michael Styllas, and Antonis Antonopoulos.[160]

2005

  • Template:Flagicon On May 29, a six-man Serbian expedition from the Vojvodina province reached the summit, the first expedition from Serbia to do so.[161][162][163]
  • Template:Flagicon Gotovdorj Usukhbayar becomes the first Mongolian to summit Mount Everest on May 30, 2005.
  • Template:Flagicon On June 1, Farkhondeh Sadegh and Laleh Keshavarz become both the first Iranian women to reach the summit.[164]
  • Template:Flagicon On May 21, Karma Gyeltshen becomes the first person from Bhutan to summit Everest.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

2006

2007

2008

  • Template:Flagicon May 22 – Vitidnan Rojanapanich became the first Thai on Everest, held Thai flag and His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej image on top of the summit for his 60th coronation ceremony.[168]
  • Template:Flagicon May 23 – Cheryl Bart and Nikki Bart became the first mother and daughter combination to summit. They became the first mother/daughter duo to complete the "Seven Summits" challenge, climbing the highest peak of every continent.[169]
  • Template:Flagicon May 25 – Mostafa Salameh became the first Jordanian to climb Everest, planting the Jordanian flag on the peak.[170]
  • Template:Flagicon May – Nimdoma Sherpa, 16 years old, becomes the youngest woman to reach the summit.[171]
  • Template:Flagicon Nadir Dendounne becomes the first Algerian to summit Everest.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
  • Template:Flagicon Thanh Nhien Doan, Bui Van Ngoi, and MauLinh Nguyen became the first Vietnamese to summit Everest.[172]
  • Template:Flagicon Laura Mallory Youngest Female Canadian to climb Mount Everest in May 2008 with her father and two brothers

[115]

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2016

2017

2019

2021

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Bibliography

  • Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1". Features full 36-page article on this historic 1933 over-flight. "A major scientific object of the Expedition was to photograph the conformation of inaccessible southern declivities of the massif out of reach of any climbing party." (p. 137)
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  • Hunt, John. The Ascent of Everest (Am. The Conquest of Everest). Hodder & Stoughton (Mountaineers' Books). 1953. Template:ISBN
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External links

Template:Mount Everest

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  39. The summitters of the 1953 British expedition were not British but a New Zealander and a Sherpa, though Hillary said that in the early 1950s, like most New Zealanders, he felt "British first, New Zealand second". He describes himself variously as British and a New Zealander in his own account of the expedition.
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