Hillary Step

Formerly one of the final and most challenging parts in summiting Mt Everest


title: "Hillary Step" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["mount-everest", "2015-nepal-earthquakes", "edmund-hillary"] description: "Formerly one of the final and most challenging parts in summiting Mt Everest" topic_path: "technology/web" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hillary_Step" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Formerly one of the final and most challenging parts in summiting Mt Everest ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/61/Hillary_Step_near_Everest_Topcropped1.png" caption="The Hillary Step (with two climbers on it) on the ridge leading up to the summit (2010 photo)"] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/23/Hillary_Step_near_Everest_top.jpg" caption="An uncropped view of the previous picture, looking up along the southern ridge line. The face of the snow-covered step is visible with two climbers on it. The face in shadow on the left is the South-West face, and in the light to the right is the top of the East/Kangshung face."] ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/16/Mount_Everest_a_close_view_with_south_summit_and_yellow_band.jpg" caption="In this pre-2015 view of Mount Everest, the high point is the summit; to the right of the summit, the southeast ridge slopes down to the Hillary Step, and then rises up to the South Summit. This is looking at the Step from the West looking east to its side"] ::

The Hillary Step was a 40-foot vertical rock face that sat 8790 m above sea level on the southeast ridge of Mount Everest. Located halfway between the "South Summit" and the true summit, the Hillary Step was the most technically difficult part of the typical Nepal-side Everest climb and the last real challenge before reaching the top of the mountain. The rock face was destroyed by the April 2015 Nepal earthquake.

Located in the death zone, the Hillary Step was Class 4 on the climbing-difficulty scale. One expedition noted that climbing the Hillary Step was "strenuous" and offered little to no escape from unpredictable, rapidly changing weather.

Heavy snowfall could enable climbers to bypass Hillary, by way of snow and ice climbing.

The Hillary Step has claimed several climbers' lives. In 1997, mountaineer Anatoli Boukreevknown for saving the lives of climbers during the 1996 Mount Everest disasterfound the body of Bruce Herrod hanging from ropes at the base of the step; Herrod had died during a climb two weeks after the 1996 disaster.

Climbing

The step was closed during the 1953 British Mount Everest Expedition by the First Assault Party of Tom Bourdillon and Charles Evans when they reached the South Summit on 26 May at 13:00, too late to continue on. Seated on the snow dome, they could look closely at the last 90 m ascent to the summit. It was not the gentle snow ridge they had hoped for, but a thin crest of snow and ice on rock, steep on the left, overhanging as a cornice on the right. It was interrupted by a formidable-looking 12 m rock step two-thirds of the way up.

The feature was named the Hillary Step after mountaineer Sir Edmund Hillary, who, together with Sherpa Tenzing Norgay, became the first to climb it during their 1953 ascent of Mount Everest. Positioned just below the summit ridge, it marked the final major technical obstacle on the Southeast Ridge route.

In his 1953 account of summiting Everest he wrote: :After an hour’s steady going we reached the foot of the most formidable-looking problem on the ridge – a rock step some forty feet [12 m] high. We had known of the existence of this step from aerial photographs, and had also seen it through our binoculars from Thyangboche. We realised that at this altitude it might well spell the difference between success and failure. The rock itself, smooth and almost holdless, might have been an interesting Sunday afternoon problem for a group of expert rock climbers in the Lake District, but here it was a barrier beyond our feeble strength to overcome. I could see no way of turning it on the steep rock bluff on the west, but fortunately another possibility of tackling it still remained. On its east side was another great cornice, and running up the full forty feet [12 m] of the step was a narrow crack between the cornice and the rock. Leaving Tenzing to belay me as best he could, I jammed my way into this crack, then kicking backwards with my crampons I sank their spikes deep into the frozen snow behind me and levered myself off the ground. Taking advantage of every little rock hold and all the force of knee, shoulder and arms I could muster, I literally cramponed backwards up the crack, with a fervent prayer that the cornice would remain attached to the rock. Despite the considerable effort involved, my progress although slow was steady, and as Tenzing paid out the rope I inched my way upwards until I could finally reach over the top of the rock and drag myself out of the crack on to a wide ledge. For a few moments I lay regaining my breath and for the first time really felt the fierce determination that nothing now could stop us from reaching the top. I took a firm stand on the ledge and signalled to Tenzing to come on up. As I heaved hard on the rope Tenzing wriggled his way up the crack and finally collapsed exhausted at the top.

In more recent years, the ascent and descent over Hillary Step were generally made with the assistance of fixed ropes, usually placed there by the first ascending team of the season. In favourable conditions, it was about two hours from the South Summit to the Step, one to two hours to climb it, and a further 20 minutes from its top to the summit of Everest. Before 2015, the narrowness along this section meant that only one climber could pass at a time, and as the number of ascents grew it often became a bottleneck, with climbers waiting their turn on the fixed ropes and slowing movement both up and down the route.

2015 alteration

It was suspected in 2016 that the April 2015 Nepal earthquake had altered the Hillary Step, but there was so much snow it was not clear whether it had truly changed. Kenton Cool wrote that the Hillary Step "is only 12 to 15 feet [3.7 to 4.6 m] high." In May 2017, Tim Mosedale and other climbers reported that "the Hillary Step is no more", although the full extent and interpretation of the changes were still nascent. Another climber who thought the Step changed by 2016 was six-time Everest summiter David Liaño Gonzalez, who summited in 2013 and 2016, when the relevant changes are reported to have occurred. However, some important Nepalese climbers, including Ang Tshering Sherpa, chairman of the Nepal Mountaineering Association, reported that the Step was still intact but covered in more snow than before. Later in the year, after seeing a large exhibition of photos from 2006 to 2016, he did agree that at least the upper portion of the step had indeed changed.

Peter Hillary, Edmund Hillary's son, was asked his opinion about the Step based on photos. He agreed it was there in part, but seemed to think it had undergone some sort of a change, noting especially what looked like a fresh broken rock. By early June 2017, more reports and photographic evidence came in, with Garrett Madison reporting that the step had conclusively changed. Dave Hahn, who has climbed Everest 15 times, was shown photos and agreed that it was changed. A special kind of mourning hit the community with realization of missing rocks and freshly hewn scars of new coloured rock at this landmark feature. Hahn noted how it was a great tribute to Hillary and Tenzing and he thought of them whenever he scrambled over it.

Later in 2017, mountaineering guide and trained photographer Lhakpa Rangdu mounted a photo exhibition at the Nepal Tourism Board showing how the Hillary Step area had changed. Rangdu has climbed Everest multiple times since 2005, including before and after the big Nepal earthquake. The combination of these skills—high-altitude photography and mountaineering—allowed him to provide a photographic history of the Hillary Step, and he has said that it is indeed gone.

References

References

  1. Vajpai, Arjun. (10 November 2010). "ON TOP OF WORLD: My Everest Adventure". Penguin UK.
  2. "Into Thin Air - Photos".
  3. Kumar, Ravindra. (14 February 2017). "Many Everests: An Inspiring Journey of Transforming Dreams Into Reality". Bloomsbury Publishing.
  4. Marks, Andrea. "Because It's Not There: Climbers May Face Danger If Everest's Hillary Step Collapsed".
  5. (1 February 2010). "Fallen Giants: A History of Himalayan Mountaineering from the Age of Empire to the Age of Extremes". Yale University Press.
  6. (30 March 2010). "Is an Everest Climb "Technical"?".
  7. Carter, H. Adams. (1991-01-01). "American Alpine Journal, 1991". The Mountaineers Books.
  8. Hamill, Mike. (4 May 2012). "Climbing the Seven Summits: A Comprehensive Guide to the Continents' Highest Peaks". The Mountaineers Books.
  9. (22 September 2015). "The Climb: Tragic Ambitions on Everest". St. Martin's Press.
  10. Gill, Michael. (2017). "Edmund Hillary: A Biography". Potton & Burton.
  11. David Roberts. (2013). "Everest 1953: First Footsteps – Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay".
  12. Hunt, John. (1953). "The Ascent of Everest". Hodder & Stoughton.
  13. Hamill, Mike. (4 May 2012). "Climbing the Seven Summits: A Comprehensive Guide to the Continents' Highest Peaks". The Mountaineers Books.
  14. (25 May 2016). "Did Everest's Hillary Step collapse in the Nepal earthquake?". Mark Horrell.
  15. 'I honestly couldn't recognise it' – the Hillary Step has changed. [http://www.stuff.co.nz/environment/83325986/I-honestly-couldn-t-recognise-it-the-Hillary-Step-has-changed ''Stuff'' August 19, 2016. Retrieved 20 August 2016].
  16. Cool, Kenton. (2015). "One Man's Everest". Preface (Penguin Random House).
  17. "Tim Mosedale on Twitter". Twitter.
  18. Herald, New Zealand. "Mt Everest's Hillary Step potentially collapsed in earthquake".
  19. "Everest Hillary Step collapsed". PlanetMountain.com.
  20. "Summit Without the Hillary Step!".
  21. (20 May 2017). "Mt Everest's Hillary Step destroyed". Newshub.
  22. Lyons, Kate. (21 May 2017). "Mount Everest's Hillary Step has collapsed, mountaineer confirms".
  23. (22 May 2017). "Everest's Hillary Step: Has it gone or not?". BBC News.
  24. (17 May 2017). "Everest 2017: Teams Prepare for Huge Summit Push - The Blog on alanarnette.com".
  25. (May 20, 2013). "Rush for Everest glory, records begin". [[The Hindustan Times]].
  26. (11 May 2016). "2 Brits, Mexican are 1st foreigners on Everest in 2 years".
  27. (May 23, 2017). "Mount Everest's Hillary Step is still there, say Nepalese climbers". [[The Guardian]].
  28. Gurubacharya, Binaj. (23 May 2017). "Nepali climbers say outcrop near top of Everest is intact".
  29. Shrestha, Sangita. "Rangdu's photo exhibit reveals truth about Hillary Step".
  30. "Mount Everest's Hillary Step is missing a 'large block' but is still there, mountaineer's son says".
  31. Bouchard, Jay. (2017-06-12). "American Climbers Confirm the Hillary Step Is Gone". Outside Online.

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