The deadly odds of climbing Mount Everest: By the numbers

Four climbers were killed over the weekend, raising the towering peak's death toll to 225. And still, 200 more climbers are preparing to challenge Everest this weekend

A group of climbers on Mount Everest's summit: Thousands of people have made it to the top of the world's tallest mountain, but hundreds have died trying.
(Image credit: David Keaton/CORBIS)

Four climbers died over the weekend as a rush of adventurers tried to reach the top of Mount Everest, creating what Nepali mountaineering official Gyanendra Shrestha described as a "traffic jam." With so many people crowding the world's highest peak, many have to spend more time at high altitudes than they should, forcing them to use up their oxygen, and increasing the chances that the notoriously perilous climb will prove deadly. And yet, this weekend, another crowd is expected to exploit a narrow window of good weather in the prime May climbing season as they scramble for the summit. Here, a look at the risks of scaling Everest, by the numbers:

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