Current:Home > InvestDetails emerge after body of American climber buried by avalanche 22 years ago is found in Peru ice: "A shock" -Wealth Navigators Hub
Details emerge after body of American climber buried by avalanche 22 years ago is found in Peru ice: "A shock"
View
Date:2025-04-12 19:55:08
An avalanche buried American climber Bill Stampfl 22 years ago as he made his way up one of the highest peaks in the Andes mountains. His family knew there was little hope of finding him alive, or even of retrieving his corpse from the thick fields of snow and the freezing ice sheets that cover the 22,000-foot tall Huascaran peak.
But in June, Stampfl's son got a call from a stranger, who said he had come across the climber's frozen — and mostly intact — body, as he made his own ascent up Huascaran.
"It was so out of left field. We talk about my dad, we think about him all the time," Joseph Stampfl said. "You just never think you are going to get that call."
He then shared the news with his family.
"It's been a shock," said Jennifer Stampfl, the climber's daughter. "When you get that phone call that he's been found your heart just sinks. You don't know how exactly to feel at first."
Police in Peru said Tuesday they had recovered Stampfl's body from the mountain where he was buried by the avalanche in 2002, when the 58-year-old was climbing with two friends who were also killed.
A group of policemen and mountain guides put Stampfl's body on a stretcher, covered it in an orange tarp and slowly took it down the icy mountain. The body was found at an altitude of 17,060 feet, about a nine-hour hike from one of the camps where climbers stop when they tackle Huascaran's steep summit.
Jennifer Stampfl said the family plans to move the body to a funeral home in Peru's capital, Lima, where it can be cremated and his ashes repatriated.
"For 22 years, we just kind of put in our mind: 'This is the way it is. Dad's part of the mountain, and he's never coming home,'" she said.
Stampfl's body and clothing were preserved by the ice and freezing temperatures, police said. His driver's license was found inside a hip pouch. It says he was a resident of Chino in California's San Bernardino County.
"I've never seen anything like that"
The effort to retrieve Stampfl's remains began last week, after an American climber came upon the frozen body while making his way to the Huascaran summit. The climber opened the pouch and read the name on the driver's license. He called Stampfl's relatives, who then got in touch with local mountain guides.
Joseph Stampfl said they worked with a Peruvian mountain rescue association to retrieve his father's body, which was about 3,000 to 4,000 feet below where he and his two friends were believed to have been killed.
"He was no longer encased in ice," the son said. "He still has got his boots on."
A team of 13 mountaineers participated in the recovery operation — five officers from an elite police unit and eight mountain guides who work for Grupo Alpamayo, a local tour operator that takes climbers to Huascaran and other peaks in the Andes.
Eric Raul Albino, director of Grupo Alpamayo, said he was hired by Stampfl's family to retrieve the body.
Lenin Alvardo, one of the police officers who participated in the recovery operation, said Stampfl's clothes were still mostly intact. The hip pouch with his driving license also contained a pair of sunglasses, a camera, a voice recorder and two decomposing $20 bills. A gold wedding ring was still on the left hand.
"I've never seen anything like that," Alvarado said.
Huascaran is Peru's highest peak. Hundreds of climbers visit the mountain each year with local guides, and it typically takes them about a week to reach the summit.
However, climate change has affected Huascaran and the surrounding peaks higher than 5,000 meters, known as the Cordillera Blanca. According to official figures, the Cordillera Blanca has lost 27% of its ice sheet over the past five decades.
Stampfl was with friends Matthew Richardson and Steve Erskine in trying to climb Huascaran in 2002. They had travelled the world to climb challenging mountains and had reached the peaks of Kilimanjaro, Rainier, Shasta and Denali, according to a Los Angeles Times report at the time.
Erskine's body was found shortly after the avalanche, but Richardson's corpse is still missing.
Jennifer Stampfl said a plaque in memory of the three friends was placed at the summit of Mount Baldy in Southern California, where the trio trained for their expeditions. She said they may return to the site with her father's remains.
Janet Stampfl-Raymer, who was Stampfl's wife, said that when her husband wasn't working as a civil engineer, he loved to be a mountaineer.
"He was a kind man. He was humble. He loved God, and he loved the mountains," she said.
"We all just dearly loved my husband. He was one of a kind," she said. "We're very grateful we can bring his body home to rest."
Stampfl carefully planned his mountaineering expeditions, his daughter said. She also said he was very humble and did not like to draw attention to himself.
"The fact that he is in the news, it is so not my dad," she said.
Melting ice reveals bodies of long-missing climbers
As glaciers increasingly melt and recede around the world, which many scientists blame on global warming, there has been an increase in discoveries of the remains of hikers, skiers and other climbers who went missing decades ago.
In June, five frozen bodies were retrieved from Mount Everest — including one that was just skeletal remains — as part of Nepal's mountain clean-up campaign on Everest and adjoining peaks Lhotse and Nuptse.
Last year, the remains of a German climber who went missing in 1986 were recovered on a glacier in the Swiss Alps.
In 2017, Italian mountain rescue crews recovered the remains of hikers on a glacier on Mont Blanc's southern face likely dating from the 1980s or 1990s. Just a few weeks later, the remains of a climber discovered in the Swiss Alps were identified as a British mountaineer who went missing in 1971, local police said Thursday.
That same year, a shrinking glacier in Switzerland revealed the bodies of a frozen couple who went missing 75 years ago. Marcelin Dumoulin and his wife, Francine, were 40 and 37 years old when they disappeared on Aug. 15, 1942. Regional police told local media that their bodies were discovered near a ski lift on the glacier by a worker for an adventure resort company.
In 2016, the bodies of a renowned mountain climber and expedition cameraman who were buried in a Himalayan avalanche in 1999 were found partially melting out of a glacier.
- In:
- Peru
- Death
veryGood! (959)
Related
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Farming Without a Net
- Theme Park Packing Guide: 24 Essential Items You’ll Want to Bring to the Parks This Summer
- Jennifer Lawrence Hilariously Claps Back at Liam Hemsworth Over Hunger Games Kissing Critique
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Inside Clean Energy: Arizona’s Net-Zero Plan Unites Democrats and Republicans
- Why we usually can't tell when a review is fake
- Inside Clean Energy: Clean Energy Wins Big in Covid-19 Legislation
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Chinese Factories Want to Make Climate-Friendly Air Conditioners. A US Company Is Blocking Them
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Nursing student found after vanishing following 911 call about child on side of Alabama freeway
- Finding Bright Spots in the Global Coral Reef Catastrophe
- Microsoft's new AI chatbot has been saying some 'crazy and unhinged things'
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Kylie Jenner Trolls Daughter Stormi for Not Giving Her Enough Privacy
- North Dakota, Using Taxpayer Funds, Bailed Out Oil and Gas Companies by Plugging Abandoned Wells
- California will cut ties with Walgreens over the company's plan to drop abortion pills
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
Theme Park Packing Guide: 24 Essential Items You’ll Want to Bring to the Parks This Summer
Wealthy Nations Continue to Finance Natural Gas for Developing Countries, Putting Climate Goals at Risk
In a Major Move Away From Fossil Fuels, General Motors Aims to Stop Selling Gasoline Cars and SUVs by 2035
Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
USWNT soccer players to watch at the 2023 Women's World Cup as USA looks for third straight title
Death Valley, hottest place on Earth, hits near-record high as blistering heat wave continues
Colorado’s Suburban Firestorm Shows the Threat of Climate-Driven Wildfires is Moving Into Unusual Seasons and Landscapes