On Monday (8 July), Peruvian police said they came across the mummified body of an American mountaineer, William Stampfl.
According to the South China Morning Post (SCMP), he was reported missing 22 years ago in June 2002.
Aged 59 at the time, an avalanche had buried his climbing party while they were scaling the mountain Huascaran in the Yungay province of Peru.
Subsequent search and rescue efforts to locate Stampfl had failed to pan out.
Police shared that ice melting on the Cordillera Blanca range of the Andes, which climate change had induced, had finally exposed his mummified remains.
SCMP reports that images the police had distributed showed that the cold had preserved Stampfl’s body, in addition to his clothes, harness, and boots.
His passport was also amidst his possessions, which enabled the police to identify him as Stampfl.
According to the UNESCO World Heritage Convention site, the Cordillera Blanca is the world’s highest tropical mountain range. Situated within it, Mount Huascaran rises to a peak of 6,768m above sea level.
Known as the highest mountain in Peru, Mount Huascaran is also a favourite of mountaineers.
Stampfl’s disappearance isn’t the first time incidents of such a nature have occurred in the area either.
In May, authorities discovered the body of an Israeli hiker, Oren Zamir, nearly a month after his disappearance.
According to the Times of Israel, his body was found near Lake Mitucocha. It was then suspected that he could have fallen from a height of about 100 meters while climbing through the area.
Last month, AFP News reported via Barron’s that an experienced Italian mountaineer, 35-year-old Tomas Franchini, also fell while trying to climb a separate Andean peak. Authorities eventually found him dead as well.
Also read: Missing Singaporean climber unable to be located on Mount Everest, wife pays tribute to him
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Featured image adapted from @AFP on X.
The authorities have investigated and closed the incident with no follow-ups required, MFA said.
He crossed the border daily in hopes of buying a house for his family.
On a few days, the thundery showers might extend into the night.
His church has urged parishioners to refrain from visiting him as he heals.
The kitten will be put up for adoption after its injuries are cured.
The toasts were barely a few centimetres thick.