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Camera team finds remains of dead mountaineer

Summary by Kronen Zeitung
To this day, there is speculation as to whether the Briton Andrew Comyn "Sandy" Irvine was the first to climb Mount Everest 100 years ago, together with his then famous mountaineering colleague George Mallory. Now there is a new lead. According to a report by "National Geographic", a documentary film team from the magazine may have found Irvine's remains on the highest mountain in the world. Both Britons disappeared on Everest in 1924. As the ma…

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To this day, there is speculation as to whether the Briton Andrew Comyn "Sandy" Irvine was the first to climb Mount Everest 100 years ago, together with his then famous mountaineering colleague George Mallory. Now there is a new lead. According to a report by "National Geographic", a documentary film team from the magazine may have found Irvine's remains on the highest mountain in the world. Both Britons disappeared on Everest in 1924. As the ma…

·Vienna, Austria
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A team of documentary filmmakers has discovered human remains on Mount Everest, apparently belonging to British climber Andrew Irvine, who got lost trying to climb the world's highest peak a century ago, National Geographic magazine reported Friday. This is reported by AFP and the newspaper Bild. A Nepalese climber breaks the record for the fastest ascent of a woman to Mount Everest Due to climate change, the layer of snow and ice in the Himala…

·Bratislava Region, Slovakia
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100 years ago, the two British mountaineers Irvine and Mallory disappeared on Mount Everest. A camera team has now made a sensational discovery.

·Luxembourg City, Luxembourg
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To this day, there is speculation as to whether the Briton Andrew Comyn "Sandy" Irvine, together with his then famous mountaineer colleague George Mallory, was the first to climb Mount Everest 100 years ago. According to a report by "National Geographic," a documentary film team from the magazine may have found Irvine's remains on the highest mountain in the world. Both Britons disappeared on Everest in 1924.

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vol.at broke the news in on Friday, October 11, 2024.
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