At the time of the quake, 45
mountaineers were at Camp II, at an elevation of 5,300 meters on the Razdelnaya Route to summit the peak. The team consisted of 23 members of the
Leningrad Mountaineering Club, six from
Czechoslovakia, four
Israelis, two
Swiss, and a Spaniard. Many of the Soviet fatalities originated from the Russian city of Leningrad, as Saint Petersburg was known during Soviet times. The earthquake caused light shaking, assigned IV on the
Mercalli intensity scale, but was significant enough to cause a block of
serac to detach and tumble down
Lenin Peak. The dislodged serac transformed into an
avalanche that crashed onto the camp, killing 43 of the 45 climbers. The two survivors, Alexei Koren and Miroslav Brozman, suffered a broken arm and leg. According to them, some team members were still conscious after the avalanche buried them, but rescue attempts failed when the debris hardened into glacier ice. Survivors and witnesses on the mountain did not report any shaking from the earthquake, presumably because the ice acted like a shock absorber. The disaster is the worst in the history of mountaineering, alongside the
2014 Nepal snowstorm disaster. The death toll from the incident surpassed that of another event in 1974. Only one body was recovered. In 2008, the glacier ice began to melt, exposing human remains of the expedition. ==See also==