From its dead bodies serving as guideposts to its most remarkable climbers to its enormous feces problem, these Mount Everest facts are even more fascinating than you could imagine.

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1 of 32Everest’s first surveyors added two extra feet to their height figure. When British surveyors in the 1850s first calculated Everest’s height at exactly 29,000 feet, they assumed people would think it was a round estimate and thus added two extra feet to their total.Wikimedia Commons 2 of 32It may be even taller than officially reported. More recent surveys put Everest’s height at 29,029 feet but a disputed satellite measurement from 1999 says that number might actually be 29,035.Wikimedia Commons 3 of 32There have been more than 200 climbing deaths on Mount Everest, and many of the bodies remain on the mountain.Wikimedia Commons 4 of 32Some of these bodies serve as guideposts for other climbers. The body of “Green Boots” (pictured), who died in 1996, lies in a cave near the summit.Wikimedia Commons 5 of 32Most corpses remain because it requires $30,000 - $70,000 and six to ten sherpas to bring a corpse back down the mountain.rkilpatrick21/Flickr 6 of 32Everest isn’t Earth’s tallest mountain; Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is. Everest is the planet’s highest point above sea level. Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is about 4,000 feet higher, but most of that height is below sea level.mbiddulph/Flickr 7 of 32The permit to climb Everest costs $11,000. If you’re caught climbing without one, the penalty fee is double the permit cost.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 32But the full cost of climbing can be as high as $100,000. Between gear, training, travel, and accommodations, TIME estimates that the climb can cost between $35,000 and $100,000.Pixabay 9 of 32An estimated 50 tons of trash have been left by Everest climbers over the last six decades. Litter includes water bottles, oxygen tanks, equipment, and feces.NAMGYAL SHERPA/AFP/Getty Images 10 of 32About 26,000 pounds of human feces must be hauled off the mountain every year.STR/AFP/Getty Images

11 of 32The oldest climber to reach the top was Yūichirō Miura of Japan at age 80.TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP/Getty Images 12 of 32He broke the record of Nepal’s Min Bahadur Sherchan, who did it at 76 and died on the mountain while trying to reclaim his title at 85.Wikimedia Commons 13 of 32The record-holder for most climbs to the summit, Kami Rita Sherpa, has done so 22 times.Milan Adhikari/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images 14 of 32Recently, the government of Nepal decided to ban solo climbers, blind people, and double amputees from climbing Everest in order to decrease fatalities.Pixabay

15 of 32Before the ban, two blind climbers were able to reach the summit. They were mountaineers Erik Weihenmayer (pictured, right) and Andy Holzer (not pictured), who did so separately.deetrak/Flickr 16 of 32Nepalese Sherpa Pem Dorjee married Moni Mulepati atop Everest in 2005, making them the first to wed at the summit.DEVENDRA M SINGH/AFP/Getty Images

17 of 32Many more deaths occur on the way down from the summit than the way up. Almost four times the amount of climbers die descending from the summit compared with those that die on the final leg of the climb to the summit.Wikimedia Commons 18 of 32At least one person has died on Everest every year since 1969, except in 1977.Wikimedia Commons 19 of 32The Nepalese call Mount Everest Sagarmatha, meaning “Forehead (or Goddess) of the Sky.“Wikimedia Commons 20 of 32The Sherpas used to regard Everest as sacred, believing gods and demons lived in the high peaks and the Yeti roamed the lower slopes.Wikimedia Commons 21 of 32Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay were the first documented climbers to reach Everest’s summit on May 29, 1953.Wikimedia Commons

22 of 32George Mallory and Andrew Irvine attempted to be the first to reach the top of Everest in 1924, but they disappeared. Mallory’s body was found in 1999 — but Irvine, along with his camera, was never found.Wikimedia Commons

23 of 32The highest rescue mission ever completed was the retrieval of Beck Weathers, an experienced climber who was left for dead twice, but is still alive.YouTube 24 of 32Mount Everest formed about 60 million years ago, as India crashed into Eurasia. This collision erased a Mesozoic Era ocean named Tethys in the process.Pixabay 25 of 32The limestone and sandstone rock at the summit were once sedimentary layers below Tethys and are 450 million years old.Wikimedia Commons 26 of 32Glaciers have chiseled Mount Everest into a giant pyramid with three faces and three ridges. The southeastern ridge is the most traveled climbing route.Pixabay

27 of 32It’s named for a man who never saw it or had anything to do with its history. Andrew Waugh, the British surveyor who first measured the mountain, named it for his predecessor, George Everest, whose India home was near the Himalayan Mountains.Wikimedia Commons 28 of 32Winds at the summit can reach 175 miles per hour.deetrak/Flickr 29 of 32The warmest average daytime temperature on the summit is about −2 degrees Fahrenheit.Mário Simoes/Flickr 30 of 32The valleys below Everest are inhabited by Tibetan-speaking Sherpas, who live in villages at elevations up to 14,000 feet.Wikimedia Commons 31 of 32Sherpas and Nepali mountain workers made up 40 percent of all Everest deaths over the last century. Sixteen of them died on one single day (April 18, 2014) due to an avalanche.Wikimedia Commons 32 of 32Like this gallery?Share it:

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33 Mount Everest Facts Even More Astounding Than The Mountain Itself View Gallery

Most of us would gaze upon the majestic beauty of Mount Everest and simply stand in awe. Others see it as the ultimate conquest.

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Explore The Unparalleled Magnificence — And Unprecedented Danger — Of Mount Everest

The Finals Hours Of Francys Arsentiev – Mount Everest’s “Sleeping Beauty”

Marco Siffredi Died Snowboarding — Down Mount Everest

1 of 32Everest’s first surveyors added two extra feet to their height figure. When British surveyors in the 1850s first calculated Everest’s height at exactly 29,000 feet, they assumed people would think it was a round estimate and thus added two extra feet to their total.Wikimedia Commons 2 of 32It may be even taller than officially reported. More recent surveys put Everest’s height at 29,029 feet but a disputed satellite measurement from 1999 says that number might actually be 29,035.Wikimedia Commons 3 of 32There have been more than 200 climbing deaths on Mount Everest, and many of the bodies remain on the mountain.Wikimedia Commons 4 of 32Some of these bodies serve as guideposts for other climbers. The body of “Green Boots” (pictured), who died in 1996, lies in a cave near the summit.Wikimedia Commons 5 of 32Most corpses remain because it requires $30,000 - $70,000 and six to ten sherpas to bring a corpse back down the mountain.rkilpatrick21/Flickr 6 of 32Everest isn’t Earth’s tallest mountain; Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is. Everest is the planet’s highest point above sea level. Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is about 4,000 feet higher, but most of that height is below sea level.mbiddulph/Flickr 7 of 32The permit to climb Everest costs $11,000. If you’re caught climbing without one, the penalty fee is double the permit cost.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 32But the full cost of climbing can be as high as $100,000. Between gear, training, travel, and accommodations, TIME estimates that the climb can cost between $35,000 and $100,000.Pixabay 9 of 32An estimated 50 tons of trash have been left by Everest climbers over the last six decades. Litter includes water bottles, oxygen tanks, equipment, and feces.NAMGYAL SHERPA/AFP/Getty Images 10 of 32About 26,000 pounds of human feces must be hauled off the mountain every year.STR/AFP/Getty Images

11 of 32The oldest climber to reach the top was Yūichirō Miura of Japan at age 80.TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP/Getty Images 12 of 32He broke the record of Nepal’s Min Bahadur Sherchan, who did it at 76 and died on the mountain while trying to reclaim his title at 85.Wikimedia Commons 13 of 32The record-holder for most climbs to the summit, Kami Rita Sherpa, has done so 22 times.Milan Adhikari/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images 14 of 32Recently, the government of Nepal decided to ban solo climbers, blind people, and double amputees from climbing Everest in order to decrease fatalities.Pixabay

15 of 32Before the ban, two blind climbers were able to reach the summit. They were mountaineers Erik Weihenmayer (pictured, right) and Andy Holzer (not pictured), who did so separately.deetrak/Flickr 16 of 32Nepalese Sherpa Pem Dorjee married Moni Mulepati atop Everest in 2005, making them the first to wed at the summit.DEVENDRA M SINGH/AFP/Getty Images

17 of 32Many more deaths occur on the way down from the summit than the way up. Almost four times the amount of climbers die descending from the summit compared with those that die on the final leg of the climb to the summit.Wikimedia Commons 18 of 32At least one person has died on Everest every year since 1969, except in 1977.Wikimedia Commons 19 of 32The Nepalese call Mount Everest Sagarmatha, meaning “Forehead (or Goddess) of the Sky.“Wikimedia Commons 20 of 32The Sherpas used to regard Everest as sacred, believing gods and demons lived in the high peaks and the Yeti roamed the lower slopes.Wikimedia Commons 21 of 32Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay were the first documented climbers to reach Everest’s summit on May 29, 1953.Wikimedia Commons

22 of 32George Mallory and Andrew Irvine attempted to be the first to reach the top of Everest in 1924, but they disappeared. Mallory’s body was found in 1999 — but Irvine, along with his camera, was never found.Wikimedia Commons

23 of 32The highest rescue mission ever completed was the retrieval of Beck Weathers, an experienced climber who was left for dead twice, but is still alive.YouTube 24 of 32Mount Everest formed about 60 million years ago, as India crashed into Eurasia. This collision erased a Mesozoic Era ocean named Tethys in the process.Pixabay 25 of 32The limestone and sandstone rock at the summit were once sedimentary layers below Tethys and are 450 million years old.Wikimedia Commons 26 of 32Glaciers have chiseled Mount Everest into a giant pyramid with three faces and three ridges. The southeastern ridge is the most traveled climbing route.Pixabay

27 of 32It’s named for a man who never saw it or had anything to do with its history. Andrew Waugh, the British surveyor who first measured the mountain, named it for his predecessor, George Everest, whose India home was near the Himalayan Mountains.Wikimedia Commons 28 of 32Winds at the summit can reach 175 miles per hour.deetrak/Flickr 29 of 32The warmest average daytime temperature on the summit is about −2 degrees Fahrenheit.Mário Simoes/Flickr 30 of 32The valleys below Everest are inhabited by Tibetan-speaking Sherpas, who live in villages at elevations up to 14,000 feet.Wikimedia Commons 31 of 32Sherpas and Nepali mountain workers made up 40 percent of all Everest deaths over the last century. Sixteen of them died on one single day (April 18, 2014) due to an avalanche.Wikimedia Commons 32 of 32Like this gallery?Share it:

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Explore The Unparalleled Magnificence — And Unprecedented Danger — Of Mount Everest

The Finals Hours Of Francys Arsentiev – Mount Everest’s “Sleeping Beauty”

Marco Siffredi Died Snowboarding — Down Mount Everest

1 of 32Everest’s first surveyors added two extra feet to their height figure. When British surveyors in the 1850s first calculated Everest’s height at exactly 29,000 feet, they assumed people would think it was a round estimate and thus added two extra feet to their total.Wikimedia Commons 2 of 32It may be even taller than officially reported. More recent surveys put Everest’s height at 29,029 feet but a disputed satellite measurement from 1999 says that number might actually be 29,035.Wikimedia Commons 3 of 32There have been more than 200 climbing deaths on Mount Everest, and many of the bodies remain on the mountain.Wikimedia Commons 4 of 32Some of these bodies serve as guideposts for other climbers. The body of “Green Boots” (pictured), who died in 1996, lies in a cave near the summit.Wikimedia Commons 5 of 32Most corpses remain because it requires $30,000 - $70,000 and six to ten sherpas to bring a corpse back down the mountain.rkilpatrick21/Flickr 6 of 32Everest isn’t Earth’s tallest mountain; Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is. Everest is the planet’s highest point above sea level. Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is about 4,000 feet higher, but most of that height is below sea level.mbiddulph/Flickr 7 of 32The permit to climb Everest costs $11,000. If you’re caught climbing without one, the penalty fee is double the permit cost.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 32But the full cost of climbing can be as high as $100,000. Between gear, training, travel, and accommodations, TIME estimates that the climb can cost between $35,000 and $100,000.Pixabay 9 of 32An estimated 50 tons of trash have been left by Everest climbers over the last six decades. Litter includes water bottles, oxygen tanks, equipment, and feces.NAMGYAL SHERPA/AFP/Getty Images 10 of 32About 26,000 pounds of human feces must be hauled off the mountain every year.STR/AFP/Getty Images

11 of 32The oldest climber to reach the top was Yūichirō Miura of Japan at age 80.TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP/Getty Images 12 of 32He broke the record of Nepal’s Min Bahadur Sherchan, who did it at 76 and died on the mountain while trying to reclaim his title at 85.Wikimedia Commons 13 of 32The record-holder for most climbs to the summit, Kami Rita Sherpa, has done so 22 times.Milan Adhikari/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images 14 of 32Recently, the government of Nepal decided to ban solo climbers, blind people, and double amputees from climbing Everest in order to decrease fatalities.Pixabay

15 of 32Before the ban, two blind climbers were able to reach the summit. They were mountaineers Erik Weihenmayer (pictured, right) and Andy Holzer (not pictured), who did so separately.deetrak/Flickr 16 of 32Nepalese Sherpa Pem Dorjee married Moni Mulepati atop Everest in 2005, making them the first to wed at the summit.DEVENDRA M SINGH/AFP/Getty Images

17 of 32Many more deaths occur on the way down from the summit than the way up. Almost four times the amount of climbers die descending from the summit compared with those that die on the final leg of the climb to the summit.Wikimedia Commons 18 of 32At least one person has died on Everest every year since 1969, except in 1977.Wikimedia Commons 19 of 32The Nepalese call Mount Everest Sagarmatha, meaning “Forehead (or Goddess) of the Sky.“Wikimedia Commons 20 of 32The Sherpas used to regard Everest as sacred, believing gods and demons lived in the high peaks and the Yeti roamed the lower slopes.Wikimedia Commons 21 of 32Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay were the first documented climbers to reach Everest’s summit on May 29, 1953.Wikimedia Commons

22 of 32George Mallory and Andrew Irvine attempted to be the first to reach the top of Everest in 1924, but they disappeared. Mallory’s body was found in 1999 — but Irvine, along with his camera, was never found.Wikimedia Commons

23 of 32The highest rescue mission ever completed was the retrieval of Beck Weathers, an experienced climber who was left for dead twice, but is still alive.YouTube 24 of 32Mount Everest formed about 60 million years ago, as India crashed into Eurasia. This collision erased a Mesozoic Era ocean named Tethys in the process.Pixabay 25 of 32The limestone and sandstone rock at the summit were once sedimentary layers below Tethys and are 450 million years old.Wikimedia Commons 26 of 32Glaciers have chiseled Mount Everest into a giant pyramid with three faces and three ridges. The southeastern ridge is the most traveled climbing route.Pixabay

27 of 32It’s named for a man who never saw it or had anything to do with its history. Andrew Waugh, the British surveyor who first measured the mountain, named it for his predecessor, George Everest, whose India home was near the Himalayan Mountains.Wikimedia Commons 28 of 32Winds at the summit can reach 175 miles per hour.deetrak/Flickr 29 of 32The warmest average daytime temperature on the summit is about −2 degrees Fahrenheit.Mário Simoes/Flickr 30 of 32The valleys below Everest are inhabited by Tibetan-speaking Sherpas, who live in villages at elevations up to 14,000 feet.Wikimedia Commons 31 of 32Sherpas and Nepali mountain workers made up 40 percent of all Everest deaths over the last century. Sixteen of them died on one single day (April 18, 2014) due to an avalanche.Wikimedia Commons 32 of 32Like this gallery?Share it:

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Explore The Unparalleled Magnificence — And Unprecedented Danger — Of Mount Everest

The Finals Hours Of Francys Arsentiev – Mount Everest’s “Sleeping Beauty”

Marco Siffredi Died Snowboarding — Down Mount Everest

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1 of 32Everest’s first surveyors added two extra feet to their height figure. When British surveyors in the 1850s first calculated Everest’s height at exactly 29,000 feet, they assumed people would think it was a round estimate and thus added two extra feet to their total.Wikimedia Commons 2 of 32It may be even taller than officially reported. More recent surveys put Everest’s height at 29,029 feet but a disputed satellite measurement from 1999 says that number might actually be 29,035.Wikimedia Commons 3 of 32There have been more than 200 climbing deaths on Mount Everest, and many of the bodies remain on the mountain.Wikimedia Commons 4 of 32Some of these bodies serve as guideposts for other climbers. The body of “Green Boots” (pictured), who died in 1996, lies in a cave near the summit.Wikimedia Commons 5 of 32Most corpses remain because it requires $30,000 - $70,000 and six to ten sherpas to bring a corpse back down the mountain.rkilpatrick21/Flickr 6 of 32Everest isn’t Earth’s tallest mountain; Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is. Everest is the planet’s highest point above sea level. Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is about 4,000 feet higher, but most of that height is below sea level.mbiddulph/Flickr 7 of 32The permit to climb Everest costs $11,000. If you’re caught climbing without one, the penalty fee is double the permit cost.Wikimedia Commons 8 of 32But the full cost of climbing can be as high as $100,000. Between gear, training, travel, and accommodations, TIME estimates that the climb can cost between $35,000 and $100,000.Pixabay 9 of 32An estimated 50 tons of trash have been left by Everest climbers over the last six decades. Litter includes water bottles, oxygen tanks, equipment, and feces.NAMGYAL SHERPA/AFP/Getty Images 10 of 32About 26,000 pounds of human feces must be hauled off the mountain every year.STR/AFP/Getty Images

11 of 32The oldest climber to reach the top was Yūichirō Miura of Japan at age 80.TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP/Getty Images 12 of 32He broke the record of Nepal’s Min Bahadur Sherchan, who did it at 76 and died on the mountain while trying to reclaim his title at 85.Wikimedia Commons 13 of 32The record-holder for most climbs to the summit, Kami Rita Sherpa, has done so 22 times.Milan Adhikari/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images 14 of 32Recently, the government of Nepal decided to ban solo climbers, blind people, and double amputees from climbing Everest in order to decrease fatalities.Pixabay

15 of 32Before the ban, two blind climbers were able to reach the summit. They were mountaineers Erik Weihenmayer (pictured, right) and Andy Holzer (not pictured), who did so separately.deetrak/Flickr 16 of 32Nepalese Sherpa Pem Dorjee married Moni Mulepati atop Everest in 2005, making them the first to wed at the summit.DEVENDRA M SINGH/AFP/Getty Images

17 of 32Many more deaths occur on the way down from the summit than the way up. Almost four times the amount of climbers die descending from the summit compared with those that die on the final leg of the climb to the summit.Wikimedia Commons 18 of 32At least one person has died on Everest every year since 1969, except in 1977.Wikimedia Commons 19 of 32The Nepalese call Mount Everest Sagarmatha, meaning “Forehead (or Goddess) of the Sky.“Wikimedia Commons 20 of 32The Sherpas used to regard Everest as sacred, believing gods and demons lived in the high peaks and the Yeti roamed the lower slopes.Wikimedia Commons 21 of 32Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay were the first documented climbers to reach Everest’s summit on May 29, 1953.Wikimedia Commons

22 of 32George Mallory and Andrew Irvine attempted to be the first to reach the top of Everest in 1924, but they disappeared. Mallory’s body was found in 1999 — but Irvine, along with his camera, was never found.Wikimedia Commons

23 of 32The highest rescue mission ever completed was the retrieval of Beck Weathers, an experienced climber who was left for dead twice, but is still alive.YouTube 24 of 32Mount Everest formed about 60 million years ago, as India crashed into Eurasia. This collision erased a Mesozoic Era ocean named Tethys in the process.Pixabay 25 of 32The limestone and sandstone rock at the summit were once sedimentary layers below Tethys and are 450 million years old.Wikimedia Commons 26 of 32Glaciers have chiseled Mount Everest into a giant pyramid with three faces and three ridges. The southeastern ridge is the most traveled climbing route.Pixabay

27 of 32It’s named for a man who never saw it or had anything to do with its history. Andrew Waugh, the British surveyor who first measured the mountain, named it for his predecessor, George Everest, whose India home was near the Himalayan Mountains.Wikimedia Commons 28 of 32Winds at the summit can reach 175 miles per hour.deetrak/Flickr 29 of 32The warmest average daytime temperature on the summit is about −2 degrees Fahrenheit.Mário Simoes/Flickr 30 of 32The valleys below Everest are inhabited by Tibetan-speaking Sherpas, who live in villages at elevations up to 14,000 feet.Wikimedia Commons 31 of 32Sherpas and Nepali mountain workers made up 40 percent of all Everest deaths over the last century. Sixteen of them died on one single day (April 18, 2014) due to an avalanche.Wikimedia Commons 32 of 32Like this gallery?Share it:

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1 of 32Everest’s first surveyors added two extra feet to their height figure. When British surveyors in the 1850s first calculated Everest’s height at exactly 29,000 feet, they assumed people would think it was a round estimate and thus added two extra feet to their total.Wikimedia Commons

2 of 32It may be even taller than officially reported. More recent surveys put Everest’s height at 29,029 feet but a disputed satellite measurement from 1999 says that number might actually be 29,035.Wikimedia Commons

3 of 32There have been more than 200 climbing deaths on Mount Everest, and many of the bodies remain on the mountain.Wikimedia Commons

4 of 32Some of these bodies serve as guideposts for other climbers. The body of “Green Boots” (pictured), who died in 1996, lies in a cave near the summit.Wikimedia Commons

5 of 32Most corpses remain because it requires $30,000 - $70,000 and six to ten sherpas to bring a corpse back down the mountain.rkilpatrick21/Flickr

6 of 32Everest isn’t Earth’s tallest mountain; Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is. Everest is the planet’s highest point above sea level. Hawaii’s Mauna Kea is about 4,000 feet higher, but most of that height is below sea level.mbiddulph/Flickr

7 of 32The permit to climb Everest costs $11,000. If you’re caught climbing without one, the penalty fee is double the permit cost.Wikimedia Commons

8 of 32But the full cost of climbing can be as high as $100,000. Between gear, training, travel, and accommodations, TIME estimates that the climb can cost between $35,000 and $100,000.Pixabay

9 of 32An estimated 50 tons of trash have been left by Everest climbers over the last six decades. Litter includes water bottles, oxygen tanks, equipment, and feces.NAMGYAL SHERPA/AFP/Getty Images

10 of 32About 26,000 pounds of human feces must be hauled off the mountain every year.STR/AFP/Getty Images

11 of 32The oldest climber to reach the top was Yūichirō Miura of Japan at age 80.TOSHIFUMI KITAMURA/AFP/Getty Images

12 of 32He broke the record of Nepal’s Min Bahadur Sherchan, who did it at 76 and died on the mountain while trying to reclaim his title at 85.Wikimedia Commons

13 of 32The record-holder for most climbs to the summit, Kami Rita Sherpa, has done so 22 times.Milan Adhikari/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

14 of 32Recently, the government of Nepal decided to ban solo climbers, blind people, and double amputees from climbing Everest in order to decrease fatalities.Pixabay

15 of 32Before the ban, two blind climbers were able to reach the summit. They were mountaineers Erik Weihenmayer (pictured, right) and Andy Holzer (not pictured), who did so separately.deetrak/Flickr

16 of 32Nepalese Sherpa Pem Dorjee married Moni Mulepati atop Everest in 2005, making them the first to wed at the summit.DEVENDRA M SINGH/AFP/Getty Images

17 of 32Many more deaths occur on the way down from the summit than the way up. Almost four times the amount of climbers die descending from the summit compared with those that die on the final leg of the climb to the summit.Wikimedia Commons

18 of 32At least one person has died on Everest every year since 1969, except in 1977.Wikimedia Commons

19 of 32The Nepalese call Mount Everest Sagarmatha, meaning “Forehead (or Goddess) of the Sky.“Wikimedia Commons

20 of 32The Sherpas used to regard Everest as sacred, believing gods and demons lived in the high peaks and the Yeti roamed the lower slopes.Wikimedia Commons

21 of 32Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay were the first documented climbers to reach Everest’s summit on May 29, 1953.Wikimedia Commons

22 of 32George Mallory and Andrew Irvine attempted to be the first to reach the top of Everest in 1924, but they disappeared. Mallory’s body was found in 1999 — but Irvine, along with his camera, was never found.Wikimedia Commons

23 of 32The highest rescue mission ever completed was the retrieval of Beck Weathers, an experienced climber who was left for dead twice, but is still alive.YouTube

24 of 32Mount Everest formed about 60 million years ago, as India crashed into Eurasia. This collision erased a Mesozoic Era ocean named Tethys in the process.Pixabay

25 of 32The limestone and sandstone rock at the summit were once sedimentary layers below Tethys and are 450 million years old.Wikimedia Commons

26 of 32Glaciers have chiseled Mount Everest into a giant pyramid with three faces and three ridges. The southeastern ridge is the most traveled climbing route.Pixabay

27 of 32It’s named for a man who never saw it or had anything to do with its history. Andrew Waugh, the British surveyor who first measured the mountain, named it for his predecessor, George Everest, whose India home was near the Himalayan Mountains.Wikimedia Commons

28 of 32Winds at the summit can reach 175 miles per hour.deetrak/Flickr

29 of 32The warmest average daytime temperature on the summit is about −2 degrees Fahrenheit.Mário Simoes/Flickr

30 of 32The valleys below Everest are inhabited by Tibetan-speaking Sherpas, who live in villages at elevations up to 14,000 feet.Wikimedia Commons

31 of 32Sherpas and Nepali mountain workers made up 40 percent of all Everest deaths over the last century. Sixteen of them died on one single day (April 18, 2014) due to an avalanche.Wikimedia Commons

32 of 32Like this gallery?Share it:

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33 Mount Everest Facts Even More Astounding Than The Mountain Itself View Gallery

33 Mount Everest Facts Even More Astounding Than The Mountain Itself View Gallery

33 Mount Everest Facts Even More Astounding Than The Mountain Itself View Gallery

33 Mount Everest Facts Even More Astounding Than The Mountain Itself View Gallery

33 Mount Everest Facts Even More Astounding Than The Mountain Itself

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But to climb the world’s tallest peak above sea level, it takes unimaginable endurance, courage, and strength as well as tons of money. Of course, it also takes the willingness to risk some limbs — and maybe even your life.

In the 65 years since Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay became the first documented climbers to summit the Himalayan peak on the border of Tibet and Nepal, more than 200 mountaineers have died there.

Some were experienced veterans who met tragic ends, like David Sharp, who was ignored by dozens of other passing climbers as he sat on the verge of his impending death in 2006.

Others were brazen daredevils who aimed for glory and came up short, like Marco Siffredi, who died trying to snowboard down Everest in 2002.

But although Everest has countless stories of tragedy and suffering, it has just as many tales of triumph and heroism. Look no further than the stories of the man who reached the summit despite being blind or the courageous couple who reached the top and got married there.

For more on these brave climbers as well as all the other astounding tidbits about Earth’s ultimate peak, check out the most interesting Mount Everest facts in the gallery above.

After this look at the most fascinating Mount Everest facts, read up on Francys Arsentiev, the mountain’s “Sleeping Beauty.” Then, discover the story of Rob Hall, whose story proves that Everest can conquer any climber no matter how experienced they are.