Audio By Carbonatix
The bodies of two climbers, including one from the U.S., have been recovered after the pair fell to their deaths from New Zealand's highest mountain during a summit attempt, police said on Wednesday.
The men were part of a group of four consisting of two New Zealand-based guides and two clients climbing the 3,724-metre (12,218 ft) Mount Cook, or Aoraki, when they fell from a ridge onto the west side of the mountain late on Monday. None of the men have been named by police.
Authorities were notified at around 11:20 p.m. (1020 GMT) on Monday, and a search and rescue team located two members of the group uninjured in the early hours of Tuesday.

Helicopters continued to search through the night and located the two missing climbers deceased at 7 a.m. on Tuesday. Their bodies were recovered around midday.
"We can now begin the process of returning these men to their families," Canterbury Aoraki Area Commander Inspector Vicki Walker said in a statement.
"I want to thank all of those involved in the rescue and recovery. It has been a difficult period, most of all for the families of the two climbers and the wider community."
Walker said one of the climbers was a U.S. national.

The New Zealand Mountain Safety Council said in a statement that one of the men who died was an internationally qualified mountain guide who was a "respected and valued member of the guiding community". The other was his client.
Search and Rescue pilot Nigel Gee told local news outlet 1News that the two climbers had been connected by a rope when they fell from the ridge.
"They both slipped and went possibly about a 1,500-foot slide," he said.
Over the past century, dozens of climbers have died on Mount Cook, where rockfalls are common and avalanches often occur at higher altitudes. Scores more have died in the surrounding national park, which is known for its mountains and glaciers.
Latest Stories
-
Aephaniel Owusu-Agyemang: A journey of leadership, policy and economic purpose
10 minutes -
Victory for Ghana’s forests: Civil society hails revocation of controversial L.I. 2462
21 minutes -
HIV testing should be mandatory for employment in Ghana – Habib Iddrisu
23 minutes -
The use of ‘olonka’ must end, we need proper measuring scale – Kofi Kapito
32 minutes -
Gov’t bans mining in forest reserves; violators face up to 25 years in prison
32 minutes -
Timely disability funds key to ending street begging — Oforikrom MCE
44 minutes -
Exploration work in Voltarian Basin set to commence as GNPC Explorco strengthens strategic ties in Northern Region
45 minutes -
Ghana’s 590 has become Africa’s reference point in lottery – NLA D-G
58 minutes -
National Election Security Taskforce engages NPP ahead of January 31 presidential primaries
1 hour -
IGP deploys reinforcement teams, armoured vehicles to Nalerigu after attacks
1 hour -
Extradition laws in Ghana: A comprehensive overview into its framework, principles and practice
1 hour -
Jonah Capital accounts blocked in Nigeria, leaving 200 workers unpaid
2 hours -
Shares worth over $50m illegally removed — Jonah Capital CEO accuses Nigerian CAC boss
2 hours -
Ghana joins WTO legal advisory body in major boost to trade defence capacity
2 hours -
Mariam Eliasu launches ‘Porter path: From load to grace’
2 hours
