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Keith Wheelock's avatar

Thanks for such an exquisite description of what likely happened near Islip and D. C. Despite commonsense procedures, air accidents do happen. Of course it is much safer to fly than to drive, and worse still is to be an electric bike rider in New York City.

Your mention of sonic booms as a kid reminded me of my concern, pre-WW II, when I watched commercial airliners overhead. My fear was that, when they emptied their toilets, that I might be splattered.

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David Holzman's avatar

The oxygen issue is particularly interesting to me because of parallels with mountain climbing. Above 26,000 feet is what they call the death zone. Without canned oxygen, and at those altitudes, sometimes even with canned oxygen, the brain and body begin functioning poorly. At those altitudes, one begins to think less clearly, and can lose will power and cease caring, and the body’s mechanisms for protecting itself from things like frostbite become less effective. (With that in mind, I'm thinking the people in the plane may not have suffered much, if at all.)

I started reading about climbing Everest this past winter. Into Thin Air is about the tragic spring on Everest of 1996, when more than 10 people involved in multiple commercial expeditions including several leaders of those expeditions, died, partly due to bad decisions in no small part due to operating in thin air. It’s a page turner.

I also read my cousin, Tom Hornbein’s 1965 book, Everest: The West Ridge, about his ascent with the US expedition of 1963. I had never been interested in the subject, as you might infer from the fact that his book had been out almost 60 years before I read it. But by all accounts, Tom and his partner on the expedition, Willi Unsoeld, accomplished something rather extraordinary. They are still the only people to have ascended via the West Ridge. There’s now a Hornbein Couloir close to the summit.

Tom was getting old, and I thought I should read up on it, so that I could know enough to ask intelligent questions and learn something from him.

Among other things, Tom describes his own feeling of losing his sense that things mattered, while at high elevations. Due undoubtedly to this experience, in his academic work as an anesthesiologist at the University of Washington Medical School, he studied the effects of thin air on people.

I'd gotten to the point where I could sense I was almost ready to talk to him in early May. On impulse, I googled him--and I got a couple of obituaries (a week later there were many more including in the Post). He'd died a day or two earlier of leukemia. He was 92.

It hadn't occurred to me that he might die any time soon. Between Everest, and my brother's experience hiking with Tom eight years ago while visiting him in Estes Park--my brother fit, and 20 years younger than Tom, having had trouble keeping up with him, 92 seemed young when I thought of Tom. Another Hornbein had passed a driving test with flying colors at 96 and lived to 104.

https://www.outsideonline.com/outdoor-adventure/climbing/remembering-tom-hornbein-everest-pioneer/

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