March 2005
Encyclopædia Britannica has had the pleasure of publishing some of the most famous mountaineers in history. Counted among our contributors are Tenzing Norgay, the Tibetan Sherpa who accompanied Sir Edmund Hillary on their historic ascent of Mount Everest in 1953; John Hunt, leader of the 1953 expedition, and Wilfrid Noyce, also a member of the 1953 team; Barry Bishop, of the first American expedition to Everest in 1963; and, most recently, Stephen Venables, who conquered Everest without the aid of supplemental oxygen in 1988.
Britannica's new coverage of Mount Everest details this rich history, but it also covers such topics as:

• The background on some of the most celebrated and daring climbs in Everest history

• Biographies of renowned mountaineers such as Edmund Hillary and Reinhold Messner

• The history behind the many names of Everest

• The geological processes involved in creating Everest and the Himalayas

• The controversy over calculating the exact height of Mount Everest

• The medical conditions that affect climbers at high altitude

• The reason Sherpas historically refused to climb Everest

• The commercialization of climbing Everest and the damage caused to its environment

• The fate of famed climber George Mallory, who disappeared on Everest in 1924

In 2003, in commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Tenzing and Hillary's historic ascent, second-generation summiteers- the sons of Hillary and Barry Bishop-scaled Mount Everest. A telling sign of just how much the world had changed was the phone call that the younger Hillary made to his father in New Zealand from the summit of Everest via satellite phone. Tenzing's son, Jamling Norgay, also participated in the expedition but did not make the final summit climb.

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Join Hillary and Tenzing as they conquer Mount Everest.

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Retrace the route of the historic 1953 climb to the summit.

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Note: Videos and animations may require Quicktime, Windows Media, or Real Player.
 
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