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What happens if you climb Everest too fast?

Basically what happens is that the body needs some time to start producing more red blood cells. If you stay at the higher level your body can't cope with the acute lack of oxygen and as a result you run the risk of altitude sickness, pulmonary edema, cerebral edema and death*.



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The most common causes of death on Mount Everest are acute mountain sickness, falls, avalanches, exhaustion, crevasses, exposure, and hypothermia. Long list, right? Well, when you're climbing above 8,000 meters, a lot can go wrong.

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This is the area with an altitude above about 26,000 feet (8,000 meters), where there is so little oxygen that the body starts to die, minute by minute and cell by cell.

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Removing bodies is dangerous and costs thousands of dollars Getting bodies out of the death zone is a hazardous chore. It's expensive and it's risky, and it's incredibly dangerous for the Sherpas, Everest climber Alan Arnette previously told the CBC.

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Nepali tourism official Bigyan Koirala told the news agency it's “almost impossible to rescue climbers at that altitude,” the equivalent of over 20,000 feet. At that altitude, temperatures can dip to negative 30 degrees Celsius (negative 86 degrees Fahrenheit).

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While gear lists and physical training are similar for climbing both peaks, K2 is widely considered a more technically challenging and dangerous mountain to climb than Everest.

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Eight climbers die on Mount Everest during a storm on May 10, 1996. It was the worst loss of life ever on the mountain on a single day. Author Jon Krakauer, who himself attempted to climb the peak that year, wrote a best-selling book about the incident, Into Thin Air, which was published in 1997.

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At least 12 people have died, with five more still missing. There are many factors at play in the deaths, including altitude sickness and overcrowding.

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The main reason climbing Everest takes so long for most people is acclimatization, the process of adapting to high altitude, low oxygen environments.

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Most people agree that Kilimanjaro is harder than Everest Base Camp. While there are aspects of the Everest Base Camp trek that are harder than Kilimanjaro, the general feeling is that Kilimanjaro is the harder of the two treks. The main reason for this is summit night – it's a biggie.

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Lincoln was part of the first Australian expedition to climb Mount Everest in 1984, which successfully forged a new route. He reached the summit of the mountain on his second attempt in 2006, miraculously surviving the night at 8,700 m (28,543 ft) on descent, after his family was told he had died.

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The mountain most widely claimed to be the highest unclimbed mountain in the world in terms of elevation is Gangkhar Puensum (7,570 m, 24,840 ft). It is in Bhutan, on or near the border with China. In Bhutan, the climbing of mountains higher than 6,000 m (20,000 ft) has been prohibited since 1994.

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Since 1922, when the first attempt to climb Everest was made, 193 climbers and 125 Sherpas have died on both sides of the mountain.

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Francys Arsentiev is known as The Sleeping Beauty of Everest. She died on Mount Everest on May 24, 1998, when she descended from the top of the tallest mountain after setting the record of the first American female to climb Everest without oxygen. Francys was an American native, born and raised in Hawaii, Honolulu.

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For others, it is the goal or dream of a lifetime. So, people keep climbing Everest, and Everest keeps collecting bodies. The mountain has claimed over 300 climbers in recent history, and about two-thirds of that number remain on the mountain. The current estimate of remains left behind on Everest total around 200.

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It takes 19 days round trip to trek to and from Everest Base Camp. Once at Everest Base Camp it then takes an average of 40 days to climb to the peak of Mt.

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