Jiro Kurihara 2011-05-21
Junya Shiraishi
Two climbers dead in Denali-area avalanche
By MARY PEMBERTON, Associated Press, Published: May 25th, 2011
Two climbers who recently completed a successful summit of 20,320-foot Mount McKinley
died in an avalanche on nearby Mount Frances while attempting a new route on the
much smaller mountain, the National Park Service said Wednesday.
Park rangers at Denali National Park said the two climbers, one from Canada and
the other from Japan, died in the avalanche on the 10,450-foot peak, which sits
just behind McKinley's base camp.
The dead have been identified as Jiro Kurihara, 33, of Canmore, Alberta, and Junya
Shiraishi, 28, of Sapporo, Japan. They were attempting a new route on the west face
of Mount Frances when they were killed in the avalanche, National Park Service spokeswoman
Maureen McLaughlin said.
Their deaths raise the number of Alaska Range climbing fatalities this season to
five. That's one more than died last season, according to McLaughlin, but less than
half the number recorded in the range's deadliest year, 1992, when 13 died, including
11 on Mount McKinley.
A search for the climbers began Monday when they did not return to base camp. Rangers
aboard a helicopter spotted a body lying in avalanche debris at the base of the
mountain. Both bodies were recovered Wednesday.
Park officials said records indicate these are the first two fatalities on Mount
Frances.
The two climbers arrived in the Alaska Range on April 27. They had successfully
climbed Mount McKinley and had a couple of other objectives in mind, McLaughlin
said. One of those was to attempt a new route on Mount Frances. The mountain is
about half as tall as McKinley, but offers some technical climbs for mountaineers,
she said.
The two were last seen at McKinley's Kahiltna base camp on Saturday. When they hadn't
arrived back by Monday from what should have been a day trip, rangers used a spotting
scope in hopes of locating them. When that failed, a helicopter search was launched
Tuesday morning.
Beth Bragg of the ADN contributed.