Sir Edmund Hillary ad Tenzig Norgay approach the South East ridge on Mount Everest, 1953.
North Face Prophet 52 Backpack
Black Diamond Half Dome Helmet
Black Diamond Raven Ultra Ice Ax
Smith Optics IO Polarized Snow Goggle
SCARPA Phantom 8000 S12 Boot
Black Diamond Sabretooth Crampon
Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay test a wireless radio system at a campsite on Mount Everest.
Apple iPad2 Tablet Computer
Canon PowerShot S100 Camera
Apple iPhone4 Phone
Members of the 1953 Everest expedition return to Camp IV after a successful ascent of Mount Everest.
North Face Himalayan Suit
2XU Compression Tights
North Face Solar Hat White
North Face Base Layer
BuyaBuff Sherpa Buff
Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay sip tea at Camp IV, after a successful ascent of Mount Everest.
North Face VE25 Tent
North Face Inferno -20 Sleeping Bag
Clif Shot 3 Pack Energy Gel
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Gear for the Climb
In this photo, Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay, the first people to reach Everest's summit, are seen near 27,300 feet. The 1953 expedition had climbers carrying loads approaching 44 pounds apiece. Today, ultralight gear cuts significant weight from a climber's load—often half the weight, or less, of Hillary's pack load.
Photograph by Alfred Gregory, Royal Geographic Society

Everest Climbing Gear—Then and Now

Last spring en route to Mount Everest, Hilaree O’Neill, a ski-mountaineer from Colorado who was part of our 2012 Everest expedition, trekked the same valleys and worked up to Base Camp just as Sir Edmund Hillary and Tenzing Norgay did 60 years ago when the duo claimed the first ascent. But on the mountain, fortunately, O'Neill did not use the antiquated gear—think woolen suits and wood-handled ice axes—that Hillary hauled. In this gallery, we take a look at the equipment Hillary and Norgay used in 1953 and the high-tech gear O'Neill will use to climb the world's tallest peak in 2012.

ByStephen Regenold
March 15, 2012

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