Two mountain climbers have died on Aoraki, New Zealand’s tallest peak, and two others from the same group were rescued, authorities said.
One of the two people killed in a fall was from the U.S., officials said Wednesday. Specialists from rescue organizations and government agencies recovered the dead climbers’ bodies late Tuesday, according to Police Area Commander Inspector Vicki Walker.
Authorities, she said, were working with the U.S. consulate. A coroner in New Zealand will investigate the deaths.
The other person who died was an internationally-recognized climbing guide and a member of the New Zealand Mountain Guides Association, the organization said in a statement.
Sgt. Kevin McErlain told The Timaru Herald the pair had been connected by a rope when they fell near the summit of Aoraki, also known as Mount Cook.
The authorities learned late Monday night local time that four climbers needed help on the mountain, which is on New Zealand’s South Island. Two of the climbers were rescued by helicopter in the early hours of Tuesday morning, Walker said.
They were uninjured. Searchers in two helicopters looked throughout the night for the other climbers, who were found dead hours later.
Aoraki is 12,218 feet high and is part of the Southern Alps, the scenic and icy mountain range that runs the length of the South Island. A settlement of the same name at its base is a destination for domestic and foreign tourists.
The peak is popular among experienced climbers. Its terrain is technically difficult due to crevasses, avalanche risk, changeable weather and glacier movement.
More than 240 deaths have been recorded on the mountain and in the surrounding national park since the start of the 20th century. Dozens of those who died on the mountain have never been found.
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This includes three men, two from the United States and one from Canada, who were believed to have died on Aoraki in December 2024. The Americans – Kurt Blair, 56, from Colorado and Carlos Romero, 50, of California – were certified alpine guides.
The climbers were missing for five days before New Zealand authorities halted a search for them, saying discoveries of their belongings suggested the men had fallen to their deaths.
The two climbers’ deaths in New Zealand follow a series of other deaths on some of the world’s most tallest and most famous peaks in recent months.
Earlier this month, an avalanche swept through a camp on Mount Yalung Ri in Nepal and killed five foreign climbers and two guides at an altitude of 16,070 feet.
Last month, popular Alaskan climber Balin Miller fell to his death from Yosemite National Park’s El Capitan.
In August, Russian climber Natalia Nagovitsyna died after she became stranded on Kyrgyzstan’s highest peak after breaking her leg. That same month, a Chinese climber died after she was hit by falling rocks on K2, the world’s second-highest peak.
In July, German mountaineer and Olympic gold medalist, Laura Dahlmeier, died while attempting to climb another peak in the region.

