The body was found above the Port de la Glère but below the summit.
2200m is below the Port..
The body was found above the Port de la Glère but below the summit.
The skull fragment was found at 2200m. The other remains were said to be located above the level of the Port (2367m).2200m is below the Port..
I think you misunderstood my post, or maybe I didn't make it clear. I'm not implying reckless at all, the opposite in fact. That's why I said I may have changed my view about her scrambling up part of that peak - i.e. I don't think she would have, even from the Spanish side, after seeing some of the pictures up thread of it, and then watching her on that via ferrata. MOO. There may be another explanation, such as falling from the trail on the ascent to the Port.
Thanks. I didn't get that you were also talking about her scrambling or not, but in any case, was most directly responding to your take that she looked tentative in that video, where I saw confidence & ease.
I was thinking of line B because of the actual path that goes up and because it seems to reach the ridge at the requisite 100m horizontal distance from the path below. Google Earth seems to show that path going through a tight gap between outcrops and emerging onto grass again as it reaches to the ridge (not that I have too much confidence in Google's rendering). Another reason is that the drop is pretty sheer at that point (see first pic attached, which shows your line B and the point at which it comes out on the ridge (circled) which is my original point X.Federico, thanks for your map with the X marked on it. That path makes a lot of sense. Regarding this picture here, is your "X path" where I've marked B on the attached picture, rather than A? I can't see any path up A, but can see a very faint one at B (original picture also attached in order to see this faint path). Although I might be completely off the mark with both A & B here.
Some great pictures.You ain't seen nothing yet!
RUTAS Y SENDEROS PIRENAICOS Y OTROS VIAJES: Image
That's 4608 x 3456 pixels and has two tiny people for scale.
Here's another taken even closer to the point of the arrow:
RUTAS Y SENDEROS PIRENAICOS Y OTROS VIAJES: Image
Here's a whole album of very detailed pictures taken in the vicinity of the Port:
Puerto de la Glera
And I'd seen this picture of the summit ridge before, but I'm not sure I'd noticed the tiny people on it:
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-UkglhcClU...con+la+Arista+Cimera+de+la+Glera.+6-6-14..JPG
I present these for public perusal without attaching any particular thesis.
I agree, sometimes partners are the last to know.Sometimes our partners are the last to know. In this case in particular, I'm not convinced they were 'on the same page'.
I agree, sometimes partners are the last to know.
Regarding the shoes, surely if they were so worn for her to slip to her death, she would have noticed long before she got to that treacherous area and put on her crampons - it's not like she'd been walking on a smooth paved path prior to that.
I can't see any sign of a path at your line A but it looks perfectly possible to get up to that little gap on the horizon. I didn't really consider that spot though because the drop on the French side doesn't look quite so perilous at that point (see second pic) and it would also seem to be clearly visible from the Port.
RS&BBMNot sure what you mean by filters.
Ok fair enough but the pictures she posted in the few days before her death showed that she was already walking in snowy terrain (and presumably there would be some icy segments there too). It wasn’t a stroll in balmy Spanish sunshine and then suddenly she was plunged unpreparedly into snowy conditions.It may not have been that slippery until it either started getting dark or she started getting into shadowy areas near the pic or the french side that are colder. She was mostly walking in the Spanish side up until then, which is warmer and sunnier.
I think she looks careful and considered.Thanks. I didn't get that you were also talking about her scrambling or not, but in any case, was most directly responding to your take that she looked tentative in that video, where I saw confidence & ease.
stuff in her personal IG history like last 3 mentioning death and last 7 not having a human on them etc.
RS&BMSince then, the new known is that those who knew her best & loved her most believe it was an accident, as do the investigators who found her and who saw & analyzed all the evidence, as do those who did her autopsy.
RS&BM
Hi @Hope4More
If we believe media reports, I do not think the media or we know autopsy results yet. Here are some tidbits I found interesting in this 14/8 (Saturday) article:
Boyfriend of tragic British hiker shares their final words to each other
Hence why I thought this NIH article might be interesting re: the possible release of an autopsy report. Maybe an autopsy can determine if ED A) died on the ledge (e.g. hypothermia after an injury or suicide) and her body fell post mortem due any of a variety of environmental factors, or B) fell to her death (e.g. accident or suicide).
- "Public prosecutor Christophe Amunzateguy said this week that the events leading to Esther's death might never be known."
- "However, all the evidence so far gathered by his forensic teams points to an accidental death, he added."
- "He said he will await the results of an autopsy before making any findings public."
Postmortem Change and its Effect on Evaluation of Fractures
RS&BM
Hi @Hope4More
If we believe media reports, I do not think the media or we know autopsy results yet. Here are some tidbits I found interesting in this 14/8 (Saturday) article:
Boyfriend of tragic British hiker shares their final words to each other
Hence why I thought this NIH article might be interesting re: the possible release of an autopsy report. Maybe an autopsy can determine if ED A) died on the ledge (e.g. hypothermia after an injury or suicide) and her body fell post mortem due any of a variety of environmental factors, or B) fell to her death (e.g. accident or suicide).
- "Public prosecutor Christophe Amunzateguy said this week that the events leading to Esther's death might never be known."
- "However, all the evidence so far gathered by his forensic teams points to an accidental death, he added."
- "He said he will await the results of an autopsy before making any findings public."
Postmortem Change and its Effect on Evaluation of Fractures
I also think that's a distinct possibility. There are a number of features near the summit that might be described as a "piton rocheux", and any number of deep crevices below that would swallow up a falling body. The structure of the summit area is more complex than it looks on Google Earth, and good photographs of the peaks are hard to come by, but I think a fall from just below the summit area into the fissure behind the ridge would fit the news reports.The only other point I was wondering about is closer to the peak and that little shelf under it. It would be hard to see a body in that area from the Port as it would be blocked by the shelf itself. And because of the curve around it would be hard to see from the opposite side too