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Like a rock climber escaped a 400-foot crash in which three friends were killed

A rock climber managed to survive in Washington's North Cascades Mountains and escape a 400 -foot fall in which his three companions were killed, the authorities said on Tuesday.

After the climber turned to his car from a tangle of ropes, helmets and other devices in the dark and drove to a salary telephone to demand help, although he suffered from internal bleeding and head trauma, said the lower HERIFF in Okanogan, Dave Yarnell.

The four climbers rose a steep gorge when the accident occurs. Although details remain scarce, the leader of the sheriff's search and rescue team said, Cristina Woodworth, so that this leads to three deaths.

The group of four – including the victims at the age of 36, 47 and 63 – scaled the early winter towns, zigs of a column divided by a column that is popular with climbers in the North Cascade Range, about 160 miles northeast of Seattle. The surviving climber was hospitalized in Seattle.

The group of four met with a catastrophe that night when the anchor seemed to secure her ropes when it falls down in a steep gorge and tried to reach the base of the Spires, Yarnell said.

The rescue team in the North Cascades Mountains

The rescue team in the North Cascades Mountains ((Okanogan County Sheriff's Office about AP)))

They fell into a sloping gulch for about 200 feet and then fell another 200 feet before they came to rest, he said. The authorities believe that the group had risen, but turned around when they saw how a storm approached.

According to Woodworth, a three-person search and rescue team reached the site on Sunday. The team used coordinates from a device that had worn the climbers that had been shared by a friend of the men.

As soon as you found the place, they called a helicopter to remove the bodies one after the other because of the rough terrain, said Woodworth.

On Monday, the respondents flocked about the equipment obtained and tried to decrypt what caused the fall, said Woodworth. They found a piton – basically a small metal tip, which is driven in rock tears or ice cream and used as anchor by climbers – that was still cut into the climbing cords.

Pitons are often left in walls. You can be there for years or even decades and become less safe over time.

The summit in question

The summit in question ((Okanogan County Sheriff's Office about AP)))

“It looked old and weathered and the rest of her equipment looked new, so we assume that it was an old piton,” said Woodworth.

Fels climbers secure anchors such as pitons or other climbing devices by ropes. The ropes should arrest their falls if they should slip, and usually use climbers backup anchors, said Joshua Cole, a leader and co-owner of North Cascades Mountain Guides, who has been climbing in the area for about 20 years.

In general, it would be unusual to split a single piton, said Cole and added that it is still unknown what exactly happened on the wall that night.

“At some point, if possible, we would like to receive more information from the survivor party,” said Woodworth.

The beers are a popular climbing place. The route that the climbers took, said Cole, was of moderate difficulties and had to move between ice, snow and rocks.

But the conditions, the amount of ice versus rocks, for example, can change quickly with the weather, he even said week to week or day or day and change the risks of the route.

Seven years ago, two climbers were killed in a fall on El Capitan in the Yosemite National Park.

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