SIGNAL GRIDv0.1

Mount Everest mystery finally uncovered 30 years after 'green boots' climber found dead

1 sources1 storiesFirst seen 7/1/2026Score26Mixed Progress
Single Source
CoverageRecencyEngagementVelocityBignessConfidenceClipability
Bigness
26
Coverage
13
Recency
94
Engagement
4
Velocity
0
Confidence
44
Clipability
58
Polarization
0
Claims
4
Contradictions
0
Breakthrough
50

Sentiment Mix

Positive0%
Neutral100%
Negative0%

Geography

North AmericaAsia

Expert Signals

GB News - News

source1 mention

AI-Generated Claims

Generated from linked receipts; click sources for full context.

Mount Everest mystery finally uncovered 30 years after 'green boots' climber found dead.

Supported by 1 story

DNA testing has finally confirmed the identity of a frozen body on Mount Everest, known worldwide as "Green Boots".The remains belong to Dorje Morup, a 47-year-old Indian police climber who perished during a devastating storm in 1996.For nearly three decades, mountaineers ascending the Tibetan route assumed the body was that of Tsewang Paljor, a 28-year-old teammate who died alongside Morup.

Supported by 1 story

The distinctive lime-green Koflach boots matched gear worn by Paljor, leading to the widespread misidentification.Official DNA verification by the Indo-Tibetan Border Police has now settled the matter definitively.

Supported by 1 story

TRENDING Stories Videos Your Say Morup served as a Lance Naik with the ITBP and was part of a six-member expedition attempting to become the first Indians to summit via Everest's northern face.His body lies frozen in a small limestone alcove at approximately 8,500 metres, within the treacherous "death zone".The tragedy unfolded on May 10, 1996, when Morup and two teammates pushed...

Supported by 1 story

Related Events

Timeline (1 stories)

Receipts (1)

Bias Snapshot

Leans Right
Left 0%Center 0%Right 100%
Bloggbnews.com7/1/2026