A New Jersey man died Friday evening as he attempted to summit Alaska’s Denali, the tallest peak in North America.
The 48-year-old climber, Fernando Birman of Stockton, New Jersey, collapsed at about 5:45 p.m. while attempting to scale the mountainside,Mountain guides immediately started CPR, but were unable to save him. Birman never regained a pulse and was pronounced dead at the scene.
Birman was not far from reaching the summit before his untimely death: He collapsed at 19,700 feet and Denali’s peak stretches 20,310 feet high. The National Park Service said his cause of death is unknown, but consistent with sudden cardiac arrest. Birman’s guides aided in his body’s recovery effort from a 19,500-foot plateau known as the Football Field using a short-haul basket.A New Jersey man died of likely cardiac arrest Friday evening as he attempted to summit Alaska’s Denali.The New Jersey man is the third climber to have died in the national park this year.was presumed dead in May when he fell through an ice bridge into a crevasse where he was buried under snow and ice.
It typically takes multiple weeks to reach Denali’s summit and the climb is only recommended for experts with experience in glacier travel, expedition environments and winter camping in arctic conditions, the Nation Park Service advises.