Sighting by Wang Hong-bao In 1979,
Ryoten Hasegawa, the leader of the Japanese contingent of a Sino-Japanese reconnaissance expedition to the north side of Everest, had a brief conversation with a Chinese climber named Wang Hong-bao, in which Wang recounted that while on the 1975 Chinese Everest Expedition, he had seen the body of an "English dead" at, lying on his side as if asleep at the foot of a rock. Wang knew the man was British, he said, by the old-fashioned clothing, rotted and disintegrating at the touch, and poked his finger into his cheek to indicate an injury. However, Wang was killed in an avalanche the following day before more information could be obtained. Further confirmation of this sighting was provided by a 1986 conversation that American Everest historian Tom Holzel had with Zhang Junyan, Wang's tent-mate from the 1975 expedition. Zhang said Wang returned from a 20-minute excursion and described finding "a foreign mountaineer" at 8,100 meters. Since no other European climber was known to have died or gone missing at that elevation on the north side of Everest before 1960, it was almost certain that the body was either that of Mallory or Irvine. Wang's 1975 sighting was the key to the discovery of Mallory's body 24 years later in the same general area, although his reported description of the body he found—"hole in cheek"—is not consistent with the condition and posture of Mallory's body, which was face down, his head almost completely buried in scree, and with a golfball-sized puncture wound on his forehead. One possibility is that Wang actually saw Irvine. Another is that Wang discovered Mallory face up and turned his body over to effect a simple burial. In 2001, the second Mallory and Irvine Research Expedition discovered Wang's 1975 campsite at and made an extensive search of its surroundings, and found that Mallory's remained the only body in the vicinity.
Sighting by Xu Jing In 2001,
Eric Simonson, leader of the 1999 Mallory and Irvine Expedition, and German researcher
Jochen Hemmleb, who inspired it, travelled to Beijing to interview some of the remaining survivors of the
1960 Chinese Mount Everest expedition, which had been the first expedition back to the north side since the British attempts of the 1920s and 1930s. During their meeting, the deputy leader of the expedition,
Xu Jing, said that on his descent from the
First Step, he spotted a dead climber lying on his back, feet facing uphill, in a hollow or slot in the rock. Since no one other than Mallory and Irvine had ever been lost on the north side of Everest before 1960, and Mallory had been found much lower down, it was almost a certainty that Xu had discovered Irvine. However, the sighting was brief, and Xu was in desperate straits during the descent, and while he clearly remembered seeing the body, he was unclear about where it was.
Sighting by Wang Fuzhou A more contemporary account has subsequently surfaced. In 1965, a member of the 1960 Chinese expedition,
Wang Fuzhou, gave a lecture in the headquarters of the
USSR Geographical Society in
Leningrad. While describing the expedition, he made a sensational remark: "At an altitude of about , we found the corpse of a European." Asked how he could be sure the dead man was European, the Chinese climber replied simply, "He was wearing
braces." ==21st-century searches==