Rescuers searching for American ski mountaineer Hilaree Nelson have recovered her body via helicopter in Nepal two days afterthe 49-year-old disappearedwhile skiing the mountain Manaslu.
On Wednesday, rescuers searching for Nelson located her body after bad weather made search-and-recovery efforts difficult on Monday and Tuesday, according to theAssociated Press.
A high line drop from a rescue helicopter was used to retrieve Nelson’s body, according toABC News, citing confirmation from Nelson’s sponsor, The North Face.
A helicopter flew Nelson’s body to a hospital in Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital, so doctors could perform an autopsy, the AP reports.
On Monday, Nelson and her partner Jim Morrison had ascended the peak of Manaslu, an 26,781-foot mountain that stands eighth-tallest in the world, with three Sherpa guides before they attempted to ski down from the summit, reportedThe New York Times.
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Hilaree Nelson.Hilaree Nelson/Instagram
A quarter-hour after Nelson and Morrison started skiing, however, the group radioed the manager of expedition organizers Shangri-La Nepal Trek to report that Nelson appeared to fall into a 2,000-foot crevasse, reportedOutsidemagazine.
Hilaree Nelson and Jim Morrison.Niranjan Shrestha/AP/Shutterstock
“The duo reached the true summit of Manaslu at 11.30 A.M. local time. And about 15 minutes later I got a call from our staff at Base Camp that her ski blade skidded off and [she] fell off the other side of the peak,” Jiban Ghimire, managing director of Shangri-La Nepal Trek toldOutsideon Monday.
An unspecified eyewitness toldThe Himalayan TimesMonday that Nelson appeared to fall roughly 80 feet into the crevasse during the accident.
Brazillian runnerFernanda Maciel, who was also on the mountain Monday, wrote in an Instagram post Tuesday that Nelson encountered an avalanche near Manaslu’s summit Monday, leading to her disappearance.
Inthe post’s caption, Maciel wrote that she herself had turned down the mountain after a separate avalanche on Manaslu hit a separate climbing expedition, killing one person and injuring 14 more, according toThe Times.
View of the mountains near the village of Bimthang in Nepal.Leisa Tyler/LightRocket via Getty
“Jim just got into a helicopter now to try to find [Nelson] on the mountain,” Maciel wrote in the post Tuesday.
A mother of two, Nelson and Morrison were also the first people to ever successfully ski down from Lhotse’s peak in 2018.
Nelson’s website, which has not yet been updated with news of her body’s recovery, adds that she was namedNational Geographic’s 2018 Adventurer of the Year.
The website states that Nelson was “an avid proponent of wild places such as the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and holds to the philosophy that these places have huge significance in the well-being of both the planet and the human psyche.”
source: people.com