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be wrong," says Contributing Editor David Roberts, who regularly reports on mountaineering for the magazine (read his feature "The Bitter Legacy" about the first ascent of K2). "However, if indeed 11 people died in a single event, that would make this the second worst Himalayan tragedy in history. The worst occurred when 16 climbers were killed in an avalanche on Nanga Parbat in 1937 seven Germans and nine porters." In 1986, 13 climbers died on K2, but in a series of storms and accidents, not a single event.Taking advantage of clear skies and low winds last Friday, 22 climbers pushed along the Southeast ridge to the summit of the mountain. But on their way back down, a large block of ice broke loose in a steep couloir at 8,200 feet. citizen to climb the world 14 highest peaks. The avalanche demolished the fixed ropes used for traversing the Bottleneck, the most dangerous section of the mountain. I can imagine them coming down exhausted and counting on the fixed ropes. When the ropes where gone, it possible some waited for daylight and a few, perhaps, tried to down climb the difficult terrain, but fell off," says Viesturs."If this disaster was triggered by climbers being stranded above the Bottleneck after a collapsing serac took out the fixed ropes," notes Roberts, "then I can think of a comparable death trap in mountaineering history."As I mentioned at the particular end involving last year'azines Flickr set associated with Periods Square pictures, the actual Television protection was clearly far much more substantial than what I could attain along with just a new single DSLR digicam