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The potential winner of Everest found 100 years later

Remains of a man who may have been a British climber who went missing a hundred years ago while trying to scale Mount Everest have been found on the slopes of the world’s highest peak, National Geographic announced Friday. . If confirmed, the discovery of Andrew Irvine’s body could further lift the veil which still covers one of the greatest mysteries in the history of modern mountaineering.

Andrew Irvine and his compatriot George Mallory were last seen on June 8, 1924, a few hundred meters from the summit of Everest, before disappearing. The body of the second was found in 1999 at an altitude of more than 8,300 m by an American expedition.

Last month, a new team financed by the American magazine “National Geographic” found under the north face of Everest, taken from the central Rongbuk glacier, a shoe containing the remains of a human foot. Inside, team members discovered a red sock with an “AC IRVINE” label sewn into it, the magazine reported. The climber’s name was Andrew Comyn Irvine, so it seems to be him.

Family members of the British climber, who disappeared aged 22, have offered to share DNA samples to confirm the identity of remains found on Everest.

The “roof of the world” (8848 m) was first officially conquered on May 29, 1953 by New Zealander Sir Edmund Hillary and Nepalese sherpa Tensing Norkay. But part of the mountain community remains convinced that they were beaten in 1924 by George Mallory, one of the most famous mountaineers of the interwar period, and Andrew Irvine, who died on their way down from the summit.

According to them, the two men were equipped with one or more cameras which could contain evidence of their exploit. As early as 1933, an expedition found an oxygen mask and an ice pick belonging to Andrew Irvine. But the search for a camera that belonged to the rope party was never successful.

Photographer and filmmaker Jimmy Chin, a member of the National Geographic team that discovered Andrew Irvine’s boot, hoped it would “narrow down the search area.”

Since the first expeditions launched in the 1920s, more than 300 climbers have died attempting to scale Everest.

The global warming which affects the Himalayan chain reveals each year to the mountaineers who follow one another on the slopes of Everest their bodies hitherto trapped in the ice.

Some are given nicknames such as “Green Shoes” or “Sleeping Beauty” and their colorful equipment now serves as a reference point on the ascent.

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