Slide kills climber on Alaskan peak

E-mail E-mail this article
Print Print this article
Print Search archive
Most read articles Most read articles
Most e-mailed articles Most e-mailed articles
ANCHORAGE — A rockslide killed one climber and injured two others as they were descending Mount McKinley's West Buttress route.

The three were attached by rope at 13,000 feet approaching Windy Corner on Sunday night when boulders "the size of trucks" fell on them, said Colby Coombs, co-director of the Alaska Mountaineering School, which led the expedition. A fourth person on the rope, a guide, was not injured.

Clint West, 47, died of multiple injuries shortly after the rockslide. West was an experienced climber who lived in Oxfordshire, England, with his wife and three daughters, Coombs said.

Mark Morford, 47, fractured his right leg and broke his wrist. Morford, who lives in Portland, underwent surgery yesterday at Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage, Coombs said.

Gerd Islei, a 56-year-old German citizen who also lives in Oxfordshire, suffered three broken ribs, a collapsed lung and a ruptured disc in his lower back.

Morford and Islei's injuries were not life-threatening, Coombs said.

The rest of the 12-member expedition were at Mount McKinley's base camp yesterday, waiting for the weather to clear so they could fly to Anchorage.

National Park Service officials said the spontaneous rockslide included falling boulders from 2 to 10 feet in diameter. National Park Service officials called it highly unusual for a rockslide of that size to occur on the West Buttress route and said they were not sure what caused it.

"If there is any additional hazard at this point, we don't know," said Denali National Park spokeswoman Kris Fister.

There have been no other known fatalities on the 20,320-foot Mount McKinley due to rockfalls, Fister said.

Yesterday, between 280 and 300 climbers were on the mountain. Many had heard about the death and were taking precautions, Fister said.

Alaska Mountaineering School has four other expeditions on Mount McKinley above the point of the accident, Coombs said.

"I think there is a hyper-concern right now for that location. Without seeing where the rocks came from, I think it's hard to tell if there are other unstable slopes up there," he said.

Rescuers from a camp at 14,200 feet descended to the expedition about 11 p.m. Sunday, an hour and a half after the accident. West had already died, according to the Park Service, but the rescuers stabilized Morford and Islei.

A high-altitude helicopter flew the injured climbers off the mountain early yesterday.