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Search Suspended for Missing Climber on Mount McKinley in Denali National Park and Preserve

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Published Date

May 26, 2009

Mount McKinley, photo of Mount McKinley by Unhindered by Talent via flickr.

Mount McKinley seems to have claimed its second victim of the climbing season. Rangers at Denali National Park and Preserve have suspended their active search for a Coloradan missing since he launched a solo bid for the summit last Tuesday.

Dr. Gerald Myers, a chiropractor from Centennial, Colorado, was thought to have been moving light without much gear when he headed for the summit. Since he was reported overdue, rangers have flown dozens of hours over Mount McKinley with hopes of spotting him.

The 42-year-old was sighted at various elevations along the West Buttress route last Tuesday, the highest of which was somewhere between 18,000 and 19,000 feet. Dr. Myers did not return to high camp on Tuesday night. While an individual climber was observed on the summit ridge the afternoon of Wednesday, May 20, it cannot be confirmed that it was Dr. Myers.

Dr. Myers was observed carrying only a small daypack with minimal survival gear at the time of his disappearance. He did not take a stove for melting snow, and it is unknown how much food he had in his pack. Throughout his climb, Dr. Myers carried an FRS radio and a SPOT locator device; the last GPS location reported by the SPOT device was at the 17,200-foot camp on May 19. Throughout his trip, Myers had been making at least one position recording each day.

The active search effort for solo climber Dr. Gerald Myers was scaled back Tuesday afternoon after search managers determined that further air operations were unlikely to locate him. There has been no sighting of the solo climber or his gear during six days of aerial and ground searching.

Although no more aerial flights are anticipated, ranger staff will continue to search through the thousands of high resolution images taken during the aerial flights in search of clues to Dr. Myers whereabouts.

In light of his limited supplies and the subzero temperatures, search managers consider that survival is outside the window of possibility. Observers have thoroughly searched the route and surrounding areas to the degree that if the climbers were visible on the surface, there is a high probability they would have been discovered.

Earlier this month a 61-year-old New Yorker collapsed and died, apparently of natural causes, while being guided to the top of Mount McKinley.

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Comments

What absolute waste of human life. If only the energy, time, and money had been spent on something less selfish and more benevolent to their fellow man.


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