Really refreshing to have a youtuber in this area of content who isn’t interested in lazily re-hashing the same cases that multiple channels already covered.
16:05 omg, don't do that; that might be why they died. From Mountaineering: the Freedom of the Hills (9th edition), "Jettison any gear you want to get rid of, including skis and ski poles. It is a good idea to keep your pack on to protect your back and neck. Larger objects tend to be transported to the surface of avalanche debris; the pack may help keep you near the surface, and it may help protect you from trauma. If you survive the traumatic forces of the avalanche, you will need the clothing and equipment in the pack."
I can see why keeping a large pack on you during an avalanche could be potentially problematic. If you end up buried significantly enough in snow, you likely wont be able to move sufficiently enough to free yourself from the straps, and the pack could become an anchor tethering you to your doom. So, i can see the logic of both sides. Ultimately i believe it comes down to luck. In some scenarios having the pack on could save you from grievous injury. In others it could keep you from escaping post-slide burial
I think it is remarkable that her body was found intact. Normally a body left for any amount of time in a glacier is ground to pieces by the glacial movement. The place that these people were camped was described as a plateau, an unlikely place for an avalanche. You mentioned the inability to speak as a effect of hypothermia. I can attest to this as I was involved in a mountaineering accident where I fell through a snow bridge into a creek. By the time my climbing partners got me out. I could not speak. I tried but the only thing that came out of my mouth was garbled grunts. I knew that I was in a bad situation but my partners saved me.
@@paveantelic7876 I don’t know why you replied to them with an attitude when that’s basically what their comment said?? 🤨 that this was not the norm, which makes it an exception to the norm.
@@RobertJamesChinneryH Not to take the opposite side of the argument, yet, Few fossils are found as such. We do know ice moves and it crushes what is buried. However, I took to note the minimal time passage of 30 years. Not an ice age. use ur minds people!!!
A simple Google search reveals some glaciers move up to 10 inches a day! Such movement could easily destroy a body if it was in the wrong place. It's fully possible.
This is so, so sad. My dad was an adventurer and traveled to 119 countries. The fact he lived to 88 is a miracle in itself. Young people feel they are invincible and push the limits.
This happened to my son who went climbing in Switzerland on his own in September 1995, he was 27years old, when he didn't come home we thought he had stayed in Europe as his marriage had broken up and we had him listed as a missing person until 2nd October 2018, the police came to tell me his body had been found on the mountain, but only his foot had been found in one of his climbing boots and part of his jacket, the DNA I and my other son had given established it was him.....For 23 years I had hoped my son was alive and well, most of him is still on that mountain.
@@christine899 Hello, I want to tell you how sorry I am for your loss. It must have been - must still be, very much, a most difficult thing to to bear. God bless you, and I hope for you and your family the peace that we all seek in any great loss. Kindest regards.
@@mynamedoesntmatter8652 Thank you for your kind words.....We were going to have a memorial service for him in April 2020 but covid stopped that, he has two older brothers, one older sister and a younger sister and six nephews he never got to meet, but I tell them about their Uncle Mark and about the things he got up to as a child.......Mark didn't seem to know what fear was, and from a young child he was called "Tiger" because he was so fearless.
It's hard working anywhere when your heart belongs to the mountains. I work in a warehouse 3000 miles away from the mountains that I love. Haven't been out there in over 5 years now, hoping to get back out by 2025
Stumbled on this channel whilst listening to other mountaineering and caving tragedies. By far one of the best channels. I also like that he doesn't just rehash and retell some of the most famous accidents and tragedies. Very gripping and fun to listen to whilst working out, at my job or on long road trips. I hope you keep up the great job
Fascinating.... it's always good to hear about climbers being found & their mystery being solved for family & friends. The level of preservation of Lena's documents is incredible & I have no doubt if there are photos on that camera film (and they treated it with care during transport) that they can develop them even now and solve more mysteries. Thanks for bringing us more European stories 👍 RIP Lykov team 🤍
It's unusual to find really original video documentaries on YT, with most people resorting to stock photos and covering the same cases over and over. There must be 500 videos on the Dyatlov group, but each of these are new to me and so well done.
Unfortunately, those who are injured in an avalanche and can't make it to the surface tend to suffocate, long before they would otherwise freeze to death.
I kinda doubt you find many true climbers on Everest these days tbh. K2 and Annapurna are more appealing and lower traffic. Standing in lines isn't climbing. :/
Yay, Archie uploaded! Your documentaries are incredible in quality, from the hardly known cases up to the in-depth research and the photo material. Thanks!
I think those hikers ran into a terrible situation and they all perished except for the one who was found 30 years later. She was probably lagging behind or in front of the rest of the group. That’s why she was found and the others were not. She either got way ahead of them or fell behind. They have to be in that general area.
I wouldn’t say anything about this is mysterious other than the whereabouts of the other members remains are. They went into snow mountains which Mother Nature is hostile and unpredictable and died more than likely by avalanche. However, the story behind the disappearance is interesting and hope they all are found eventually.
These are exciting stories. I’m laid up with a broken back in three places, degenerative bone disease. I enjoy shutting my eyes and imagining I’m there.
Sounds like an avalanche. I am glad that Yelena's body was found. I must say I find it difficult to understand why anyone would go and climb freezing mountains, putting themselves as risk. It must have been a terrible death.
@@flaviomonteiro1414 No doubt that is true. However, I personally would prefer to live the rest of my life as opposed to climbing a mountain in the snow with a strong possibility that it may cost me my life.
I totally understand the desire to get to the top of a mountain. It's like some opposite of gravity force is pulling you up and you need to do it. My health prevented me from going very far. Perhaps saved my life. But I totally understand the desire.
Susan Gavaghan @ actually if you look at statistics especially in America road accidents you are statistically more liable to die in a car accident then from an avalanche or a mountain climbing unless you are in the top .01% of climbers pushing your limit.
Excellent video!!!! I've heard many stories of American and European climbers but I get very few stories about Soviet and Russian mountiers. This is a welcome change for me to see some new history. Thank you for posting this.
I'm happy this channel doesn't fill his videos up with unrelated video footage & pictures of random folk or places. "Grand work there big man"👍👍👍 Clearly love's making quality material over quantity.
I'm thinking it was probably an avalanche. An avalanche could spread the group miles apart. If they fell into an ice crevice, I would think they would never find them, for crevices are usually very deep.
Fascinating story, yet with a tragic outcome: Yelena's frozen corpse was found 31 years later by a hiking team. She must fallen behind the group when the avalanche from Mt. Elbrus struck--which would explain why she was found, and the other hikers most likely ended up in the crevasses. Condolences to her relatives. Archie, thanks for sharing this video! 😱🙀😢😿💔💔
I really enjoy hearing you tell of the Russian mountians, the people and the customs. There is something ominous and foreboding about that area of the world, the way you cover these stories is quite intriguing and downright spooky at times.
I love that this is becoming a topic more youtube channels are covering. Im honestly sick and tired of all these crime channels and murder cases. This is good content
It does sound like maybe a avalanche or weather was really bad, that they tried to Desend and possibly fell. I hope they find the others one day. I also wish for Andrew Irvine to be found on Everest, not to prove a summit, but to find out what happened to Irvine. People who don't climb always criticize others who do, they know the risks. They work to live to really live. Most people will never understand it
I have just found your channel and am binging my way through all of your content. Your enunciation and the way you deliver the stories id excellent! Keep up the great work!
NOT YELLING ALMOST COMPLETELY BLIND SORRY FOR CAPS HYPOTHERMIA IS ACTUALLY CALLED THE HAPPY DEATH BECAUSE ONCE IT OFFICIALLY BEGINS WITHOUT ANY HELP IT CAN KILL IN FIFTEEN MINUTES AND YOU BECOME SO DISORIENTED THAT YOU BECOME UNAWARE YOUR EVEN DYING THIS IS WHY ITS SO DANGEROUS BUT WHAT A FANTASTIC INFORMATIVE WELL DONE VIDEO EVERYONE STAY SAFE AND HEALTHY AND BLESSINGS
I have heard speculation that victims of hypothermia actually enter a state of euphoria as they lose nerves in the outer body. It is said that this relieves the pain in a way similar to opioids.
I developed hypothermia in only a matter of 5 minutes. Thankfully I was able to rewarm once I had shelter but it was a good amount of whole body trembling for 20 min at least before it stopped. If I hadn’t made it inside and didn’t have blankets and dry clothes in there I would have been in serious trouble. Hypothermia can get you when you least expect. All it takes is being stuck in an unexpected storm with rain and high winds, low temperature and wet clothes.
I learned a new word today. I had never heard of “philology.” I had to look it up. I took an etymology class in high school. But I never knew about philology. Thanks Archie!
Nice video and captivating story! I also like and enjoy the tone of your voice, so calm and a bit chilly :) As a sidenote, at 14:14 I've recognized the place being displayed, it's The Sfinx, Bugeci Mtn from Carpath range, Romania.
Great channel. Been binging all day. I have tried to increase the brightness to no avail. You have very darkly lit videos which takes some time getting used to. But I'll manage. 🙈
George Mallory, who supposedly was the first person to climb Everest in 1924, disappeared during this effort. His body was found 75 years later, in May 1999, at the North Face, the northern side of Mount Everest.
At 14:10 that mountain is called Sfinx (Romania, Bucegi mountain, in english Sphinx) is equated with the eponymous ancient Dacian king and the eternity of Romanian identity. Is located at an altitude of over 2,200 meters and the main creator of the shapes on the Bucegi Plateau is.. the wind.
Wow these are awesome and horrible stories at the same time! But its also good I guess when they can have closer to the family even tho the parents are probably already passed but I'm sure there's still a lot of family that are grateful even though I'm sure they already knew what happened to them! Great story once again!
great story...... thanks very much for sharing.......R I P the climbers.....may their souls soar high above the mountains they loved yet in the end killed them.....
It would be so awesome to see those pictures on that camra! That's one true time capsule! Well I guess finding a frozen body after 30+ years is true! Its so horrible and amazing at the same time!
I think that in an avalanche that it's quite possible to suffocate well before hypothermia sets in. If the snow is tightly packed around the person that person may not be able to breathe very deeply if at all.
I do not agree with the frozen bodies becoming 3x heavier. Unless some snow/ice is stuck to the appendages or something, it really makes no logical sense for the weight to become 3x heavier due to temperature alone. I'll have to look into that. Great video
Taking off your backpack during an avalanche sounds like a terrible idea. Wouldnt it provide extra padding, and also you would def want your supplies after that...?
I don't know who is responsible for the written transcription of the narrator's voice - it's a disaster. The very name of the mountain Elbrus has been distorted around 15 times, the funniest being Elvis and Alvarez. Other than that, the story is nicely told.
They coulda been sweept into crevice of glacier tied together the other may have hooked up on rocks and rope broke and broke her if ur ties to rope that is jerked tight against a body it will break it thowing her against rocks the rest swept awy into a glacier crevic now either part of the glacier or ended up gpin to bottom then as glacier moves break them to peoces the others may be up higher you could mack a map of the route and plot the body the backpack and where that load crash then use metal detectors they would have metal on them or ground penetrating radar its small like a lawnmower you mow the glacier in rows it sends sound through the ice bouncing vack on solid objects lije rocks look like rocks a person wpuld look like a shadow person and if still all tied then ud see that still use google earth and look
There's a rock @ 14:10***Tell me that don't look like Ninja Turtle or something off star Wars??😂 No joke!!!! Very sad video though! I'm hooked on these little documentaries!!!
Iirc Elbrus was not required for the Snow Leopard title, all 7000m+ peaks of the Soviet Union plus Khan Tengry peak, which if I'm not mistaken was called "The Leopard's Tail"
I’d like to hear the science behind a frozen body weighing more. I’ve heard this before (maybe from this channel) but I don’t buy it. Where would this added mass come from? The only way I can see it is if there is additional ice stuck to the body like they were in ice and they just cut a block out. In that case, it wouldn’t really be the body that weighs more though, it would be weight from ice. I’m sure someone will jump in if I’m wrong.
Really refreshing to have a youtuber in this area of content who isn’t interested in lazily re-hashing the same cases that multiple channels already covered.
You don’t watch enough UA-cam. This is definitely a ‘good’ rehash, but it’s not special 😂
I don't watch enough youtube either. I was happy to watch this and not another 1996 everest or 2008 k2 video.
finally someone which u can understand talking..
Haha you mean you don't need to watch more videos about Dyatlov pass?
@@jarnold1789 I might like to watch a few more of those.
16:05 omg, don't do that; that might be why they died. From Mountaineering: the Freedom of the Hills (9th edition), "Jettison any gear you want to get rid of, including skis and ski poles. It is a good idea to keep your pack on to protect your back and neck. Larger objects tend to be transported to the surface of avalanche debris; the pack may help keep you near the surface, and it may help protect you from trauma. If you survive the traumatic forces of the avalanche, you will need the clothing and equipment in the pack."
you will need your skies and poles too
I can see why keeping a large pack on you during an avalanche could be potentially problematic. If you end up buried significantly enough in snow, you likely wont be able to move sufficiently enough to free yourself from the straps, and the pack could become an anchor tethering you to your doom. So, i can see the logic of both sides.
Ultimately i believe it comes down to luck. In some scenarios having the pack on could save you from grievous injury. In others it could keep you from escaping post-slide burial
I think it is remarkable that her body was found intact. Normally a body left for any amount of time in a glacier is ground to pieces by the glacial movement. The place that these people were camped was described as a plateau, an unlikely place for an avalanche. You mentioned the inability to speak as a effect of hypothermia. I can attest to this as I was involved in a mountaineering accident where I fell through a snow bridge into a creek. By the time my climbing partners got me out. I could not speak. I tried but the only thing that came out of my mouth was garbled grunts. I knew that I was in a bad situation but my partners saved me.
@@wayneallen8469 ever heard of exceptions?
not necessarily a lot of glacial movement in a short 30 years on a plateau, seemingly even sheltered by crevices.
@@paveantelic7876 I don’t know why you replied to them with an attitude when that’s basically what their comment said?? 🤨 that this was not the norm, which makes it an exception to the norm.
@@RobertJamesChinneryH Not to take the opposite side of the argument, yet, Few fossils are found as such. We do know ice moves and it crushes what is buried. However, I took to note the minimal time passage of 30 years. Not an ice age. use ur minds people!!!
A simple Google search reveals some glaciers move up to 10 inches a day! Such movement could easily destroy a body if it was in the wrong place. It's fully possible.
These stories, unknown to most of us outside of Russia, are thoroughly enjoyable - albeit very tragic. Great job, Archie!
This is so, so sad. My dad was an adventurer and traveled to 119 countries. The fact he lived to 88 is a miracle in itself. Young people feel they are invincible and push the limits.
This happened to my son who went climbing in Switzerland on his own in September 1995, he was 27years old, when he didn't come home we thought he had stayed in Europe as his marriage had broken up and we had him listed as a missing person until 2nd October 2018, the police came to tell me his body had been found on the mountain, but only his foot had been found in one of his climbing boots and part of his jacket, the DNA I and my other son had given established it was him.....For 23 years I had hoped my son was alive and well, most of him is still on that mountain.
@@christine899
Hello, I want to tell you how sorry I am for your loss. It must have been - must still be, very much, a most difficult thing to to bear. God bless you, and I hope for you and your family the peace that we all seek in any great loss. Kindest regards.
@@mynamedoesntmatter8652 Thank you for your kind words.....We were going to have a memorial service for him in April 2020 but covid stopped that, he has two older brothers, one older sister and a younger sister and six nephews he never got to meet, but I tell them about their Uncle Mark and about the things he got up to as a child.......Mark didn't seem to know what fear was, and from a young child he was called "Tiger" because he was so fearless.
@Christine
So much sorry Christine to read your story. May your Son rest in peace. Warm Regards.
@@christine899 omg. I’m so sorry for your loss❤️🙏🏻❤️
It's hard working anywhere when your heart belongs to the mountains. I work in a warehouse 3000 miles away from the mountains that I love. Haven't been out there in over 5 years now, hoping to get back out by 2025
I hope you get out to find your peace friend
Stumbled on this channel whilst listening to other mountaineering and caving tragedies. By far one of the best channels. I also like that he doesn't just rehash and retell some of the most famous accidents and tragedies. Very gripping and fun to listen to whilst working out, at my job or on long road trips. I hope you keep up the great job
Fascinating.... it's always good to hear about climbers being found & their mystery being solved for family & friends. The level of preservation of Lena's documents is incredible & I have no doubt if there are photos on that camera film (and they treated it with care during transport) that they can develop them even now and solve more mysteries. Thanks for bringing us more European stories 👍 RIP Lykov team 🤍
Fascinating her intuition didn't save her.
Poor little thing.
It's unusual to find really original video documentaries on YT, with most people resorting to stock photos and covering the same cases over and over. There must be 500 videos on the Dyatlov group, but each of these are new to me and so well done.
When Archie uploads its time to drop everything. I have infinite time for these videos.
Unfortunately, those who are injured in an avalanche and can't make it to the surface tend to suffocate, long before they would otherwise freeze to death.
"she wasn't interested in sports titles or awards..." She was a true climber....unlike many who climb Everest.
I kinda doubt you find many true climbers on Everest these days tbh. K2 and Annapurna are more appealing and lower traffic. Standing in lines isn't climbing. :/
@@LeCharles07 I totally agree with you. For a lot of those is about their egos. The Sherpas do all the work really.
@@LeCharles07 Ascending fixed ropes isn't really climbing either. I wouldn't go aid-climb El Cap and claim I climbed it
@@jarnold1789 if it isn't climbing up a cliff then its just a scramble
Elberus
What a great story. Thanks for uploading. It's refreshing to hear a UA-camr not speak at a rate of 500 words a minute. Keep up the good work mate.
Yay, Archie uploaded! Your documentaries are incredible in quality, from the hardly known cases up to the in-depth research and the photo material. Thanks!
I think those hikers ran into a terrible situation and they all perished except for the one who was found 30 years later. She was probably lagging behind or in front of the rest of the group. That’s why she was found and the others were not. She either got way ahead of them or fell behind. They have to be in that general area.
I think Elena must have ran in the same terrible situation as the others as she had multiple broken bones.
I wouldn’t say anything about this is mysterious other than the whereabouts of the other members remains are. They went into snow mountains which Mother Nature is hostile and unpredictable and died more than likely by avalanche. However, the story behind the disappearance is interesting and hope they all are found eventually.
Mother Nature, but why would she take the life of that young woman?
Either way Father Time will eventually rip everything apart.
These are exciting stories. I’m laid up with a broken back in three places, degenerative bone disease. I enjoy shutting my eyes and imagining I’m there.
So sorry to hear that. I hope it doesn't keep you down. I got back issues myself it's horrible
Stay Strong
Our minds can take us to wondrous places❤
This chanel is high quality, my best discovery on UA-cam! Please do more like this!
Thank you! I’m really enjoying your channel. Your narration is detailed and intelligent, which makes a refreshing change on YT.
And yet there are still those whinging about his pronunciation of "English" words. He's not English, ffs!
Sounds like an avalanche. I am glad that Yelena's body was found. I must say I find it difficult to understand why anyone would go and climb freezing mountains, putting themselves as risk. It must have been a terrible death.
It's hard to explain but some of us are born with some kind of "calling" to do things like that, to explore to climb, to see...
@@flaviomonteiro1414 No doubt that is true. However, I personally would prefer to live the rest of my life as opposed to climbing a mountain in the snow with a strong possibility that it may cost me my life.
[whispers] I think the driving force is Girl Power.
I totally understand the desire to get to the top of a mountain. It's like some opposite of gravity force is pulling you up and you need to do it.
My health prevented me from going very far. Perhaps saved my life. But I totally understand the desire.
Susan Gavaghan @ actually if you look at statistics especially in America road accidents you are statistically more liable to die in a car accident then from an avalanche or a mountain climbing unless you are in the top .01% of climbers pushing your limit.
Excellent video!!!! I've heard many stories of American and European climbers but I get very few stories about Soviet and Russian mountiers.
This is a welcome change for me to see some new history. Thank you for posting this.
Thank you for bringing another amazing video to us. Your videos are always so well done.
How tragic that the parents never learned what happened to their daughter...
Well, they KNEW she died on that mountain… doing what she loved…🤷🏼♀️
Thank you for a respectful post. May their souls rest in peace.
I'm happy this channel doesn't fill his videos up with unrelated video footage & pictures of random folk or places.
"Grand work there big man"👍👍👍
Clearly love's making quality material over quantity.
This channel deserves more subscribers. Very interesting.
I'm thinking it was probably an avalanche. An avalanche could spread the group miles apart. If they fell into an ice crevice, I would think they would never find them, for crevices are usually very deep.
Yes, new video ! Thank you !
Yay!! Early Christmas present. Archie uploaded another great video!
Absolute top quality content. Interesting cases I'd never heard of! Keep up the good work.
Fascinating story, yet with a tragic outcome: Yelena's frozen corpse was found 31 years later by a hiking team. She must fallen behind the group when the avalanche from Mt. Elbrus struck--which would explain why she was found, and the other hikers most likely ended up in the crevasses. Condolences to her relatives.
Archie, thanks for sharing this video!
😱🙀😢😿💔💔
I really enjoy hearing you tell of the Russian mountians, the people and the customs. There is something ominous and foreboding about that area of the world, the way you cover these stories is quite intriguing and downright spooky at times.
I love that this is becoming a topic more youtube channels are covering. Im honestly sick and tired of all these crime channels and murder cases. This is good content
It does sound like maybe a avalanche or weather was really bad, that they tried to Desend and possibly fell. I hope they find the others one day. I also wish for Andrew Irvine to be found on Everest, not to prove a summit, but to find out what happened to Irvine. People who don't climb always criticize others who do, they know the risks. They work to live to really live. Most people will never understand it
I have just found your channel and am binging my way through all of your content. Your enunciation and the way you deliver the stories id excellent! Keep up the great work!
NOT YELLING ALMOST COMPLETELY BLIND SORRY FOR CAPS HYPOTHERMIA IS ACTUALLY CALLED THE HAPPY DEATH BECAUSE ONCE IT OFFICIALLY BEGINS WITHOUT ANY HELP IT CAN KILL IN FIFTEEN MINUTES AND YOU BECOME SO DISORIENTED THAT YOU BECOME UNAWARE YOUR EVEN DYING THIS IS WHY ITS SO DANGEROUS BUT WHAT A FANTASTIC INFORMATIVE WELL DONE VIDEO EVERYONE STAY SAFE AND HEALTHY AND BLESSINGS
I have heard speculation that victims of hypothermia actually enter a state of euphoria as they lose nerves in the outer body. It is said that this relieves the pain in a way similar to opioids.
There are a plethora of more horrible ways to die, for sure!
Blessins to you too and stay healthy & warm.
I developed hypothermia in only a matter of 5 minutes. Thankfully I was able to rewarm once I had shelter but it was a good amount of whole body trembling for 20 min at least before it stopped. If I hadn’t made it inside and didn’t have blankets and dry clothes in there I would have been in serious trouble. Hypothermia can get you when you least expect. All it takes is being stuck in an unexpected storm with rain and high winds, low temperature and wet clothes.
HI! I STOPPED COMPLAINING ABOUT CAPS UNDERSTANDING THAT THE VISUAL DISABILITY COULD BE A FACTOR.
The video and content quality is really astounding. Looking forward to see your channel grow!
In fact, hypothernia is probably the nicest way to go.
Not that there is a good way.
I find that this video is very well done and informative. Thank you.
I learned a new word today. I had never heard of “philology.” I had to look it up. I took an etymology class in high school. But I never knew about philology. Thanks Archie!
Nice video and captivating story! I also like and enjoy the tone of your voice, so calm and a bit chilly :)
As a sidenote, at 14:14 I've recognized the place being displayed, it's The Sfinx, Bugeci Mtn from Carpath range, Romania.
Great channel. Been binging all day. I have tried to increase the brightness to no avail. You have very darkly lit videos which takes some time getting used to. But I'll manage. 🙈
I love your channel and hope to hear more stories!
George Mallory, who supposedly was the first person to climb Everest in 1924, disappeared during this effort. His body was found 75 years later, in May 1999, at the North Face, the northern side of Mount Everest.
Excellent channel, my friend!!!🙏✌️😷
We need more content feom this channel, amazing stories!
Great work friend.... your channel will blow up fasho!
Just came across your channel...Very interesting, well put together. Yep you got a new subscriber...✌️... Looking forward to more...
Great video , really interesting and well put together.
At 14:10 that mountain is called Sfinx (Romania, Bucegi mountain, in english Sphinx) is equated with the eponymous ancient Dacian king and the eternity of Romanian identity. Is located at an altitude of over 2,200 meters and the main creator of the shapes on the Bucegi Plateau is.. the wind.
Wow these are awesome and horrible stories at the same time! But its also good I guess when they can have closer to the family even tho the parents are probably already passed but I'm sure there's still a lot of family that are grateful even though I'm sure they already knew what happened to them! Great story once again!
Excellent video of a very sad story! 👍🇺🇲
great story...... thanks very much for sharing.......R I P the climbers.....may their souls soar high above the mountains they loved yet in the end killed them.....
Haven't watched the video yet but thank god they found that woman. She must be happy to be home after all that time
.. you can't really be happy when you're dead tho lol
Love love love your channel
Właśnie znalazłem Twój kanał dzisiaj 17 stycznia 2022 r. Jestem teraz nowym subskrybentem 😁
Great video archie
Great presentation as always. I really love your voice 😍💘.
Were they ever able to access the photos? Any updates? TY!!
It sounds like they might have been swept into a crevasse or buried by an avalanche.
An avalanche can tear and break a body apart. Fact. Where's the mystery?
What a horrible way to die. RIP Klochkov Group
Thank you for telling us this story. You speak excellent English.
I enjoy popular stories and learning different or even updated information on the cases.
Really great channel man. Love the content I have never heard before
It would be so awesome to see those pictures on that camra! That's one true time capsule! Well I guess finding a frozen body after 30+ years is true! Its so horrible and amazing at the same time!
Man your english accent has gotten so much better over the years.
Hi Admin. I recently joined your channel. I like and enjoy these documentaries. Thank you so much.
I love her Passport photo.. she looks so beautiful. I'm glad they found her and brought her down from that place.
I think that in an avalanche that it's quite possible to suffocate well before hypothermia sets in. If the snow is tightly packed around the person that person may not be able to breathe very deeply if at all.
What do I think happened? You did a damn good job of covering this incident! Keep up the awesome work.
I do not agree with the frozen bodies becoming 3x heavier. Unless some snow/ice is stuck to the appendages or something, it really makes no logical sense for the weight to become 3x heavier due to temperature alone. I'll have to look into that. Great video
Taking off your backpack during an avalanche sounds like a terrible idea. Wouldnt it provide extra padding, and also you would def want your supplies after that...?
Yes another one!
I think it's a great way to good by doing what you love......
Interesting video 👍🙂
Glad they brought het home!
Great story!Thank you!
Unless we are reminded of things we tend to forget.
If the group of people at base camp heard a big thunderous crashing sound l think it may have been an avalansh that killed the group
Body found intact but many broken bones...Avalanche for sure, maybe not a huge one, but big enough to wipe them out.
Wow how amazing to find all this after 30 years.
I don't know who is responsible for the written transcription of the narrator's voice - it's a disaster. The very name of the mountain Elbrus has been distorted around 15 times, the funniest being Elvis and Alvarez. Other than that, the story is nicely told.
I'm never sure whether to admire their creativity or be sad at the results.
I thought so too! I never knew a mountain that had my name 😂
They coulda been sweept into crevice of glacier tied together the other may have hooked up on rocks and rope broke and broke her if ur ties to rope that is jerked tight against a body it will break it thowing her against rocks the rest swept awy into a glacier crevic now either part of the glacier or ended up gpin to bottom then as glacier moves break them to peoces the others may be up higher you could mack a map of the route and plot the body the backpack and where that load crash then use metal detectors they would have metal on them or ground penetrating radar its small like a lawnmower you mow the glacier in rows it sends sound through the ice bouncing vack on solid objects lije rocks look like rocks a person wpuld look like a shadow person and if still all tied then ud see that still use google earth and look
Your videos are great! But you don't fall when you look down. You just look down lol
Chilling
My grandma is from Kabardino Balkaria though she is ukrainian.. but she grew up there. Didn't know thats where elbrus was!
They finally found them, after all this time.
I love your videos but I couldn’t watch this one because of that quivering left side pattern☹️
It’s only in the beginning…
There's a rock @ 14:10***Tell me that don't look like Ninja Turtle or something off star Wars??😂 No joke!!!! Very sad video though! I'm hooked on these little documentaries!!!
Iirc Elbrus was not required for the Snow Leopard title, all 7000m+ peaks of the Soviet Union plus Khan Tengry peak, which if I'm not mistaken was called "The Leopard's Tail"
Oh jeez I never considered that freezing the body would dramatically increase the weight
I would have liked to watch the video but I am sensitive to flashing lights . You placed them on each side of the screen.
Why would the body weight more after death?
I wish we could see the last pictures of them!
Yay another one!
I’d like to hear the science behind a frozen body weighing more. I’ve heard this before (maybe from this channel) but I don’t buy it. Where would this added mass come from? The only way I can see it is if there is additional ice stuck to the body like they were in ice and they just cut a block out. In that case, it wouldn’t really be the body that weighs more though, it would be weight from ice. I’m sure someone will jump in if I’m wrong.
Thank you very much.
And just think of all the technology climbers have today that all the early people didn't have! They are true crazy but badasses at the same time!
Was there a compelling and mysterious force which caused their disappearance?
Yes an avalanche?