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==Additional== |
==Additional== |
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− | He was a Russian climber, known as the Snow Leopard for his mountaineering prowess, including the climbing of the five highest peaks in the former Soviet Union. He and his wife had reached the summit without supplemental oxygen and were descending when disaster struck. A team of Uzbek climbers said later that they had seen Sergei, who had asked for oxygen and medicine, and then left them to return to his wife. He was not seen again. |
+ | He was a Russian climber, known as the Snow Leopard for his mountaineering prowess, including the climbing of the five highest peaks in the former Soviet Union. He and [[Francys Arsentiev |his wife]] had reached the summit without supplemental oxygen and were descending when disaster struck. A team of Uzbek climbers said later that they had seen Sergei, who had asked for oxygen and medicine, and then left them to return to his wife. He was not seen again. |
Latest revision as of 19:56, 7 July 2020
Sergei Arsentiev Human Mummy | |
Biographical Information | |
---|---|
Name(s) | Unknown |
Age | |
Sex | m |
Status | climber |
Height | |
Source | |
Culture | |
Date(s) | 1998 |
Site | Mt Everest |
Current Location | |
Location | |
Catalog # | |
Mountaineers Francys and Sergei Arsentiev decided to scale Everest without bottled oxygen, and succeeded. On their way back down from the summit, however, they were exhausted, and had to spend another night on the slope with barely any oxygen. At some point the next day, Sergei became separated from his wife. He made it back to camp, but went back to find her once he realized she wasn’t there. A group of climbers had encountered Francys and said she was suffering from oxygen deprivation and frostbite, but Sergei was no where to be seen. His body was found a year later, he had apparently suffered a fatal fall while looking for his wife. They left behind a son.
Mummification
His frozen body remains on Everest with about 150 other mountain fatalities.
Additional
He was a Russian climber, known as the Snow Leopard for his mountaineering prowess, including the climbing of the five highest peaks in the former Soviet Union. He and his wife had reached the summit without supplemental oxygen and were descending when disaster struck. A team of Uzbek climbers said later that they had seen Sergei, who had asked for oxygen and medicine, and then left them to return to his wife. He was not seen again.