Roman Giutashvili rescue In 1991, during an expedition that summited Mount Everest with
Anatoli Boukreev, Mazur was involved in the rescue of Georgian climber
Roman Giutashvili. Mazur gave Giutashvili his oxygen and dug him into a snow hole after the Georgian had collapsed at 8:05pm on the descent. Mazur left Giutashvili to descend and find help, ultimately resulting in his rescue. Giutashvili later revealed to Mazur that he had lived with only one lung since he was 10 years old.
Gary Ball rescue In 1992 on
K2, Mazur and his team worked together to rescue
Gary Ball from 8300 meters after Ball was struck down by a pulmonary embolism.
Rob Hall,
Scott Fischer,
Ed Viesturs,
Neal Beidleman and Jon Pratt also assisted in the high altitude rescue. The operation took several days, descending technical ground.
Lincoln Hall rescue At 7:30 am on May 26, 2006, Mazur and his fellow ascending climbers, Andrew Brash (
Canada), Myles Osborne (
UK) and Jangbu Sherpa (
Nepal), were eight hours into their planned ascent to the summit up the North Ridge of Mount Everest. They were climbing along a severe ridgeline that dropped off 10,000 feet to one side and 7,000 feet to the other. Two hours below the summit, conditions seemed perfect. There was no wind and no clouds, and they were feeling strong and healthy. At an altitude of approximately 28,000 feet, when rounding a corner on the trail to the summit, the team encountered
Lincoln Hall. Hall, an Australian climber, had been 'left for dead' by his own expedition team on the descent from the summit the previous day. After collapsing, failing to respond to prolonged treatment and being unable to walk, he was now sitting alone on the trail. He was found with his jacket around his waist, no hat and no gloves, and without any of the proper equipment for survival in such conditions. The group determined that he was suffering from symptoms of
cerebral oedema,
frostbite and
dehydration as he was hallucinating, mumbling deliriously and appeared generally incoherent in his responses to offers of help. The rescuers replaced the hat, jacket, and gloves Mr. Hall had discarded, anchored him to the mountain, and gave him their own oxygen, food and water. They radioed Hall's team, who had given him up for dead, and convinced them he was still alive and must be saved. Mr. Hall's team leader had already called his wife the night before to tell her that Hall was dead. The rescuers arranged for Sherpas from Mr. Hall's team to ascend and help with the rescue. For four hours, Mazur's team stayed to care for Mr. Hall. Phil Crampton coordinated the rescue from the high camp at 26,000 feet, and Kipa Sherpa was the liaison to Lincoln Hall's team at advance base camp at 21,000 feet. Extended stays at extreme altitude are risky even when planned in advance and when climbers have all the supplies they need. By using their own survival supplies to sustain Hall, going to the summit after so many hours spent helping Hall was out of the question. Staying there to care for Hall, they took a risk the weather would turn for the worse and they might not even have sufficient oxygen and food to support themselves on the way down. In abandoning their own attempt on the summit in order to save Hall's life, epitomized the noblest traditions of mountaineering. Mazur said of his team abandoning their summit attempt, "The summit is still there, and we can go back. Lincoln only has one life." Several print as well as television documentaries tell the story in detail. Their actions were underscored by the death of British climber
David Sharp a few days earlier, a solo climber who had been terribly sick and other mountaineers who passed by him on their way to the summit.
Rick Allen rescue During the 2018 Broad Peak Expedition, Mazur and his team rescued
Rick Allen, a British climber who disappeared at night near the summit and whose teammates reported him dead and descended with Rick's satellite phone. Mazur and team found Rick Allen alive and brought him down to base camp three days later. == Community and environmental engagement ==