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"Since we had more information than we often do, we were able to localize the search more densely," McLaughlin said. "It doesn't mean it's less challenging. It's just a different kind of challenge."
The avalanche measured 200 feet wide and 800 feet top to bottom and created a snow pile averaging only 3-4 feet deep.
The search initially concentrated on probing the avalanche debris, which also had fallen into the crevasse. Then mountaineering ranger Tucker Chenoweth descended into the crevasse and spotted gear. At 100 feet down, he dug through ice debris and spotted rope, which matched about 60 feet of rope attached to Ogi. Hoping to reach the other roped-in climbers, the ranger continued to dig but found the going difficult through the compacted ice and snow debris.
Park officials said the danger of falling ice made it too risky to continue an attempt to recover bodies.
The bodies of two other Japanese climbers who disappeared in 2008 were found the following year, thanks to high-resolution images captured during an unrelated search for another missing climber. But though visible in the images, the frozen bodies of Tatsuro Yamada of Saitama-Ken, Japan, and Yuto Inoue of Tokyo remain roped together at the 19,800-foot level because of the risk involved in the extremely steep and rocky location.
The photographs were taken during a search for Gerald Myers, a chiropractor from Centennial, Colo. Myers was last seen in May 2009 after he left his climbing partners at 14,200 feet to make a solo attempt to summit McKinley.
His body has never been found.
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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