Kathmandu - On Everest's sacred slopes, climate change is thinning snow and ice, increasingly exposing the bodies of hundreds of mountaineers who died chasing their dream to summit the world's highest mountain. Among those scaling the soaring Himalayan mountain this year was a team not aiming for the 29,032-foot peak, but risking their own lives to bring some of the corpses down.
Five as yet unnamed frozen bodies were retrieved — including one that was just skeletal remains — as part of Nepal's mountain clean-up campaign on Everest and adjoining peaks Lhotse and Nuptse.
It is a grim, tough and dangerous task.
Rescuers took hours to chip away the ice with axes, with the team sometimes using boiling water to release its frozen grip.
"Because of the effects of global warming, (the bodies and trash) are becoming more visible as the snow cover thins," said Aditya Karki, a major in Nepal's army who led the team of 12 military personnel and 18 climbers.
More than 300 people have perished on the mountain since expeditions started in the 1920s, eight this season alone.
Many bodies remain. Some are hidden by snow or swallowed down deep crevasses.
Others, still in their colourful climbing gear, have become landmarks en route to the summit.
Nicknames include "Green Boots" and "Sleeping Beauty."
"There is a psychological effect," Karki told AFP. "People believe that they are entering a divine space when they climb mountains, but if they see dead bodies on the way up, it can have a negative effect."
Many are inside the "death zone," where thin air and low oxygen levels raise the risk of altitude sickness.
Climbers must have insurance, but any rescue or recovery mission is fraught with danger.
One body, encased in ice up to its torso, took the climbers 11 hours to free.
The team had to use hot water to loosen it, prising it out with their axes.
"It is extremely difficult," said Tshiring Jangbu Sherpa, who led the body retrieval expedition. "Getting the body out is one part, bringing it down is another challenge."
Sherpa said some of the bodies still appeared almost as they had at the moment of death — dressed in full gear, along with their crampons and harnesses.
One seemed untouched, only missing a glove.
The retrieval of corpses at high altitudes is a controversial topic for the climbing community.
It costs thousands of dollars, and up to eight rescuers are needed for each body.
A body can weigh over 220 pounds, and at high altitudes, a person's ability to carry heavy loads is severely affected.
But Karki said the rescue effort was necessary.
"We have to bring them back as much as possible," he said. "If we keep leaving them behind, our mountains will turn into a graveyard."
Bodies are often wrapped in a bag then put on a plastic sled to drag down.
Sherpa said that bringing one body down from close to Lhotse's 8,516 metre peak — the world's fourth-highest mountain — had been among the hardest challenges so far.
"The body was frozen with hands and legs spread," he said. "We had to carry it down to Camp Three as it was, and only then could it be moved to be put in a sled to be dragged."
Rakesh Gurung, from Nepal's tourism department, said two bodies had been preliminarily identified and authorities were awaiting "detailed tests" for the final confirmation.
The retrieved bodies are now in the capital Kathmandu, with those not identified likely to be eventually cremated.
Despite the recovery efforts, the mountain still holds its secrets.
The body of George Mallory, the British climber who went missing during a 1924 attempt on the summit, was only found in 1999.
His climbing partner, Andrew Irvine, has never been found — nor has their camera, which could provide evidence of a successful summit that would rewrite mountaineering history.
The clean-up campaign, with a budget of over $600,000, also employed 171 Nepali guides and porters to bring back about 12 tons of garbage.
Fluorescent tents, discarded climbing equipment, empty gas canisters and even human excreta litter the well-trodden route to the summit.
"The mountains have given us mountaineers so many opportunities," Sherpa said. "I feel that we have to give back to them, we have to remove the trash and bodies to clean the mountains."
Today, expeditions are under pressure to remove the waste that they create, but historic trash remains.
"This year's trash might be brought back by the mountaineers," said Karki. "But who will bring the old ones?"
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