UPDATE: Search ends for Japanese climbers on U.S. mountain

June 18, 2012

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

ANCHORAGE, Alaska--A shallow avalanche on Alaska's Mount McKinley may not have killed four Japanese climbers, but the slide pushed them into a crevasse more than 100 feet (30 meters) deep, the National Park Service said on June 17.

Spokeswoman Kris Fister said on June 17 that the search for the climbers was permanently suspended after a mountaineering ranger found the climbing rope in debris at the bottom of the crevasse.

“We believe this is their final resting place,'' Fister said.

Yoshiaki Kato, 64, Masako Suda, 50, Michiko Suzuki 56, and 63-year-old Tamao Suzuki, 63, are missing and presumed dead.

The avalanche early on June 13 morning also pushed Hitoshi Ogi, 69, into the crevasse. Ogi climbed 60 feet (18 meters) out of the crevasse and reached a base camp on June 14.

Ogi had been attached to the other members of the team by climbing rope as they descended in an avalanche-prone section of the West Buttress Route. The rope broke in the avalanche and fall.

The group was on a section known as Motorcycle Hill at about 11,800 feet (3,600 meters), which has a 35-degree slope. Climbers who take a required briefing on the mountain are warned of the avalanche danger there.

“This is the first time there have been fatalities,'' Fister said.

The avalanche, likely caused by new snow falling on rock or hardened snow and ice, measured 200 feet (70 meters) wide and 800 feet (244 meters) top to bottom, Fisher said. It created a snow pile averaging only 3-4 feet (about 1 meter) deep.

A 10-person ground crew searched for the climbers on June 16. The patrol included a rescue dog and a handler. The crew probed the avalanche debris zone and found no sign of the missing climbers.

Park Service mountaineering ranger Tucker Chenoweth, however, found grim signs of the doomed climbing team in the crevasse below where Ogi had fallen.

He descended about 100 feet, and while probing through debris, found the other end of Ogi's rope. He continued to dig but found compacted ice and snow debris.

The danger of falling ice made it too dangerous to continue an attempt to recover bodies, Fister said.

All the climbers were members of the Japanese alpine club Miyagi Workers Alpine Federation.

Ogi suffered a minor hand injury, according to the Park Service. He was flown off the mountain on June 14.

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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In this June 15 photo provided by the National Park Service, climbers hike through the area where an avalanche swept a Japanese climbing team off a hill during their descent from Alaska's Mount McKinley. (AP photo/ National Park Service)

In this June 15 photo provided by the National Park Service, climbers hike through the area where an avalanche swept a Japanese climbing team off a hill during their descent from Alaska's Mount McKinley. (AP photo/ National Park Service)

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  • In this June 15 photo provided by the National Park Service, climbers hike through the area where an avalanche swept a Japanese climbing team off a hill during their descent from Alaska's Mount McKinley. (AP photo/ National Park Service)