10 Mountain Climbing Disasters Deadlier Than The Everest Movie
10. The Nazi’s Try Again & Fail Even Harder - 1937
The Mountain: Not to be confused with the fictional Nanda Parbat housing the League of Assassins on Arrow, Nanga Parbat is the ninth highest mountain in the world, and one of only fourteen mountains to rise above the eight-thousand meter (26,246 feet) mark. Located in the northernmost region of Pakistan, Nanga Parbat is also known as the “Killer Mountain.”
# of Deaths: 16
The Story: In 1932, Willy Merkl led a German-American team up Nanga Parbat, but they had to turn back due to being woefully unprepared for conditions in the Himalayas. In 1934, Merkl returned, this time fully funded by Nazi Germany, which likely wanted to brag about being the first ones to reach the top of Nanga Parbat. There was nothing to brag about, though, after a nine-day blizzard killed Merkl and eight other members of his crew right as they were prepared to make the final stretch of the climb. Their bodies weren’t actually discovered until 1938 at which point another German expedition found the snow cave which had become their tomb.
That means when the Nazi’s financed another party to scale Nanga Parbat in 1937 they didn’t know for sure what had become of Merkl. They assigned Karl Wien the task of leading the new expedition, and he was under orders to follow the same path Merkl had charted. Battling through heavy snowfall, Wien’s group made it to around Rahkiot Peak, 7,070 meters (23,195 feet) up, and were resting in camp when an avalanche buried them, killing 16, seven Germans, including Wien, along with nine Sherpas.
The Nazis never did make it to the top of Nanga Parbat. The first group to do so was a German-Austrian team organized by Willy Merkl’s half-brother in 1953 by which point Hitler was ever so dead.