7 comments

  • sillysaurusx 1 hour ago
    Greenboots is so iconic. Other people use him as a marker. Glad he got some attention. It’s always seemed a shame that it’s impossible to give him a proper burial.
  • ferfumarma 1 hour ago
    FTA:

    Known simply as 'Green Boots' because of his distinctive bright green mountaineering footwear still protruding from the snow and ice, the remains have now been identified as Indian climber Dorje Morup, 47.

    For decades, many mountaineers believed the body belonged to fellow Indian climber Tsewang Paljor, 28. The DNA comparison has now ended that long-running mystery.

    The identification was confirmed by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) ahead of a bid to recover the body from Everest's notorious 'death zone' at an altitude of more than 8,000 metres.

  • satvikpendem 1 hour ago
    > Indian climber Dorje Morup, 47.
  • onemoresoop 1 hour ago
    Greenboots has been laying there frozen in the snow since the 90s. It even became a landmark for other climbers. Im glad they managed to at least identify the poor soul. Who knows how much longer he’s going to rest there..
    • KomoD 1 hour ago
      Looks like they might retrieve the body.

      > The Indo-Tibetan Border Police is soliciting bids from high altitude recovery agencies for a mission to retrieve the remains of a climber long known only as "Green Boots" from the mountain's northern slope

      https://www.cbsnews.com/news/mount-everest-green-boots-body-...

      • msephton 30 minutes ago
        That's mentioned in the article
        • sillysaurusx 24 minutes ago
          A lot of people come to HN for the comments. It’s often useful to gauge a story by public sentiment first.

          That said, you’re ultimately correct that it’s in the article, but I appreciated it. :)

    • ChrisMarshallNY 1 hour ago
      I think Mallory's body was left until 1999. He died in 1924.
      • bhickey 47 minutes ago
        Conrad Anker covered his body in scree. Subsequent expeditions have been unable to locate it. There's speculation that it was secretly removed from the mountain for political reasons.
      • mkl 26 minutes ago
        The location of Mallory's body was unknown until 1999. The location of this one has been known pretty much the whole time.
        • ChrisMarshallNY 8 minutes ago
          I think another climber spotted him in the 1930s, but didn't mention it, because he didn't want to have a media circus.
    • gokhan 16 minutes ago
      Is this an AI generated comment?
      • fsckboy 13 minutes ago
        I think—no
  • Mistletoe 35 minutes ago
    Interesting, I always thought it was the younger guy. Here's kudos to Dorje for flossing in those bright green boots at 47.
  • aaron695 1 hour ago
    [dead]