- Source: The Man Who Skied Down Everest
The Man Who Skied Down Everest is a Canadian documentary about Yuichiro Miura, a Japanese alpinist who skied down Mount Everest in 1970. The film was produced by Crawley Films' "Budge" Crawley and directed by Crawley and Bruce Nyznik.
Miura skied 2,000 m (6,600 ft) in two minutes and 20 seconds and fell 400 m (1,320 ft) down the steep Lhotse face from the Yellow Band just below the South Col. He used a large parachute to slow his descent. He came to a full stop just 76 m (250 ft) from the edge of a bergschrund, a large, deep crevasse where the flow ice shears away from stable ice on the rock face and begins to move downwards as a glacier.
The ski descent was the objective of The Japanese Everest Skiing Expedition 1970. Six Sherpa porters were killed in a single accident by a collapse of a section of the Khumbu Glacier along the main route to the base of the mountain, as well as a Japanese member who died of a heart attack.
Crawley Films won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature for this picture. The Academy Film Archive preserved The Man Who Skied Down Everest in 2010.
See also
1970 Mount Everest disaster
References
External links
The Man Who Skied Down Everest at IMDb
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Academy Award untuk Film Dokumenter Terbaik
- The Man Who Skied Down Everest
- 1970 Mount Everest disaster
- F. R. Crawley
- Everest (2015 film)
- Everest base camps
- North Face (Everest)
- Everest (1998 film)
- Timeline of Mount Everest expeditions
- Mount Everest
- Khumbu Icefall