The head of China's national climbing team joined other professionals in the search for two missing US mountain climbers yesterday, after the body of a famous mountaineer was found on Mount Edger Saturday morning.
Jonathan Copp, 35, a well-known climber, and his two teammates, Wade1 Johnson and Micah Dash, were scheduled to begin their climb on April 30 and return around May 28. The men submitted their plan to local authorities in Sichuan province as part of a safe climbing registration2.
Experts feared the three might have encountered an avalanche3 while climbing Mount Edger, 6,400 meters above sea level in Luding county of Sichuan.
Friends reported them missing to the US consulate4 in Chengdu on June 4. A rescue operation by local government was started immediately, said Lin Li, secretary general of Sichuan Mountaineering Association.
"(Copp's) body was found on an ice sheet of the mountain at an elevation5 of 4,000 meters around 10 am Saturday. And his passport number reads he is the 35-year-old Jonathan," said Lin, adding they have taken photos of the dead to send to his relatives for procedural confirmation6.
Copp was a multi-award winner and a climbing ambassador to a number of organizations and companies including ESPN. He had climbed serious, first ascents7 in Argentina, Pakistan, Chile, Alaska, the Himalayas and the Yukon.
According to an entry published on his blog entitled "buried by multiple avalanches8", he and other three climbers survived avalanches in Sept 2007 by desperately9 taking shelter in a crevasse10 for four days while climbing the 6,843 m Nanda Kot.
According to Lin, the association dispatched five local mountain climbing trainers to help in the rescue after it received the report of the missing climbers.
"The head of China's national climbing team, Wang Yongfeng, professional rescuers from the US and trainers from our association joined the rescue," Lin told China Daily yesterday.
However, extreme weather has hampered11 the search.
Lin said heavy fog cut visibility to as little as 30 meters while flying rocks also made rescue difficult.