The sleeping bags that could endure temperatures to minus 35 degrees Celsius, delivered satisfactory. One should also keep in mind that Sasha and Lyuda could have acquired survivable fractures in their chest that eventually led to their symptomatic postmortem compressions when laying below heavy layers of snow. The four most injured and exhausted went into bivouac 1. I would even suggest that if the gusts exceeded 25-30 m/s (or much more), some of them could occasionally even have tumbled down exposed parts of the incline. In the event of a katabatic wind, the Dyatlov team acted skillfully by shadowing the steps above. This will probably be my last post here because the English assignment I was researching this for is over now. The latter place is the name of a rolling terrain that bear much resemblance to the passes south of Otorten in the Urals. They met our anticipations greatly and provided us with tent, stove and other larger camping equipment but most of all they found our hearts through their great strength and extremely joyful humor and spirit. In this context I want to apologize to the people having presented a similar theory up to date a presentation that I might have missed, not the least among all excellent Russian productions that are hidden to me behind picturesque Cyrillic letters. There, eight Swedish skiers froze to death and one was seriously injured after being surprised by a weather phenomenon called catabatic winds. Hadjiyska, Teodora. Enjoy. However, the severe injuries found on the last four recovered bodies should in the case of a katabatic event, be tied to other circumstantial evidence - such as pressure from a collapsed snow shelter and natural decomposition due to three months of exposure in the prevailing environment. On the night of the 31st, the group would stash extra supplies in a nearby wood for their eventual return trip. Furthermore, if it perchance was blood in her stomach, it could be a result of many other circumstances. Ulcers and multiple bleedings in the stomach as a result of severe hypothermia are quite normal. Their trip would take a deadly turn with all but one of them freezing to death in what is considered Sweden's most serious mountain accident in modern times. Stranger still, some of the groups clothing was noted as being radioactive. 12) Looking down from the ridge near the Dyatlov pass over the slopes leading to the western area of the Auspiya valley. Careful analysis of all available evidence supports the hypothesis that the group was in fact driven from their tents by a unique type of high wind experienced on mountains, called katabatic winds. Usually everything should be accounted for in any pathological report, but the description of her body shows that no difference to the type of wounds was made when analyzed. The inquest showed the nature of all the deaths were not what would have been expected. Young Mountain Biker Faces Paralysis After Accident - YouTube Projectile-like flakes of ice from the snow cover is another dangerous effect of such forceful winds - although, no exact information on the conditions of the snow during the time is at hand. According to estimates in 1959, the temperature that the Dyatlov group experienced in the late afternoon and in the evening on the first of February, was between minus 25 and 30 degrees Celsius. By Stefan Sykes. In the end - exhausted and looking for a last solution, perhaps they tried to climb the cedar with frozen limbs in trying to get a glimpse of the tent with its glowing flashlight. Miracle of the Andes: How Survivors of the Flight Disaster - History ven ett annat sllskap, bestende av tre mn med ltt packning, gav sig samma morgon av p en dagstur. Obviously they raised their tent laterally on the slope. Because more specific data are lacking, we analyzed available data from the mountain rescue services in Germany, Austria, southern Tirol, Zermatt/Switzerland, and Chamonix/France from 1987 until 1997.
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