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K2: The Savage Mountain — Triumph and Tragedy on the World's Deadliest Peak

Why K2 kills more climbers per attempt than any other 8,000er

1 min read 175 words Summit Stories

K2: The Savage Mountain — Triumph and Tragedy on the World's Deadliest Peak

K2 has earned its nickname "The Savage Mountain" through decades of devastating expeditions. From the first ascent in 1954 by an Italian team to the catastrophic 2008 serac collapse that killed 11 climbers in a single day, K2 remains mountaineering's ultimate test. This guide chronicles the mountain's most dramatic chapters.

Introduction

K2 by the Numbers

Early Attempts and the 1954 First Ascent

The Duke of Abruzzi's 1909 Expedition

The 1938-1939 American Expeditions

Compagnoni and Lacedelli — 1954 Summit

The 1986 Season of Death

13 Deaths in One Summer

The Bottleneck's Deadly Reputation

The 2008 Disaster

The Serac Collapse

11 Dead in 48 Hours

The Rescue Efforts

K2 in Winter

The Last Great Challenge

The 2021 First Winter Ascent

Why K2 Is Deadlier Than Everest

Technical Difficulty Comparison

Weather Windows and Exposure

The Fatality Rate

The Future of K2 Climbing

Glossary Terms

Base Camp Death Zone Eight-Thousander Fixed Rope Serac Summit

Frequently Asked Questions