Aiguille Verte | |
Elevation M: | 4122 |
Prominence M: | 689 |
Range: | Mont Blanc Massif, Graian Alps |
Translation: | Green needle |
Language: | French |
Location: | Haute-Savoie, France |
Map: | France |
Label Position: | left |
Coordinates: | 45.9347°N 6.97°W |
First Ascent: | 29 June 1865 by Edward Whymper, Christian Almer and Franz Biner |
The Aiguille Verte (in French pronounced as /eɡɥij vɛʁt/; 4122m (13,524feet)), which is French for "Green Needle", is a mountain in the Mont Blanc massif in the French Alps.
It was first climbed on 29 June 1865 by Edward Whymper, Christian Almer and Franz Biner, a fortnight before the fateful first ascent of the Matterhorn. Whymper was unable to climb with his usual guide, Michel Croz, who had to wait for a client in Chamonix. As a result, Whymper hired the services of Christian Almer, who had been with Alfred Wills on the Wetterhorn in 1854. Whymper describes the push for the summit:
The second ascent was by Charles Hudson, T. S. Kennedy and Michel Croz via the Moine ridge. The first woman to climb the Aiguille Verte was Lucy Walker in 1870. The first solo ascent of the Arête Sans Nom was accomplished by Nicolas Jaeger in 1972.
Aiguille Verte is nearly as famous for its descents as it is for its ascents.
In 1989, Jean-Marc Boivin made the first descent of Aiguille Vert's Nant Blanc (North Face) on skis.[1] Ten years later, Marco Siffredi made the second-ever descent of Nant Blanc, and the first descent on a snowboard.[2] The North Face would not be descended via this route again until 2018 when Paul Bonhomme and Vivian Bruchez successfully descended on skis.[3]
At times the Mont Blanc massif range has estimated 60 deaths per year.[4] As part of this range, there have been a number of incidents where climbers or skiers have been killed or gone missing on Aiguille Verte.
1964 - A freak summer avalanche resulted in the deaths of 14 climbers, who were roped together.[5]
1990 - Snowboarding pioneer Bruno Gouvy died when he lost control after parachuting from a helicopter.[6]
2014 - On July 9, the body of Patrice Hyvert, a French climber who went missing on 1 March 1982, was found.[7] In October, a skier was killed while skiing the Whymper Couloir when he fell several hundred metres to his death.[8]
2018 - In January, a skier was killed while skiing the Whymper Couloir.[9] In August, three members of an Italian climbing exhibition were killed when slipping on rocks.[10]
2023 - In June, four were killed on Aiguille Verte. Two skiers were killed in separate incidents on Couturier Couloir, and two climbers fell to their death while on the Whymper Couloir.[11] [12]
2024 - In May, a skier fell 500 meters while descending the Whymper couloir.[13]