airdog07
August 18th, 2014, 10:47 PM
Australian base jumper dies after jump from Brevent peak in French Alps Updated August 18, 2014 17:00:33
http://www.abc.net.au/news/image/5677120-3x2-340x227.jpg (http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-08-18/base-jumping-at-brevent-mountain-in-french-alps/5677124)
Photo: Brevent mountain near the French ski resort of Chamonix is popular with base jumpers. (file) (AZFP: Philippe Desmazes) (http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-08-18/base-jumping-at-brevent-mountain-in-french-alps/5677124)
(http://maps.google.com/?q=46,2%28France%29&z=5)
Two base jumpers, including an Australian, were killed in separate accidents in the French Alps on Sunday (local time) after parachuting off mountains in their wingsuits.
Their deaths bring to four the number of people killed taking part in the extreme sport in France this month.
Police said the first victim, a 33-year-old Australian, died after jumping off the 2,600-metre Brevent peak in the Haute-Savoie.
Rescue workers said he was found "several hundred metres below in a wooded area" and probably died on impact.
Two hours later, a French base jumper was killed after hitting a rock face on his descent from Mont Granier in the neighbouring Isere region of southeastern France.
The man, aged 52 and described as "extremely experienced", was found 200 metres below the ledge from which he had jumped.
"He managed [to] get over the first rock face, but not the second," one of the rescuers said.
Investigations have been launched into both accidents.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is providing consular assistance to the family of the Australian man.
On August 6, two base jumpers, one from Switzerland, the other from France, died in similar accidents in the Alps and French Pyrenees.
A base jump is defined as a leap off a fixed high point - the name being an acronym for building, antenna, span (such as bridges) and earth (natural settings).
Unlike skydiving, which involves leaping from an aircraft, base jumpers take off with a parachute from a fixed point, usually a cliff or a bridge.
The sport carries high risks. A Norwegian study published in 2007 concluded that base jumping was five to eight times more likely than skydiving to result in injury or death.
http://www.abc.net.au/news/image/5677120-3x2-340x227.jpg (http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-08-18/base-jumping-at-brevent-mountain-in-french-alps/5677124)
Photo: Brevent mountain near the French ski resort of Chamonix is popular with base jumpers. (file) (AZFP: Philippe Desmazes) (http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-08-18/base-jumping-at-brevent-mountain-in-french-alps/5677124)
(http://maps.google.com/?q=46,2%28France%29&z=5)
Two base jumpers, including an Australian, were killed in separate accidents in the French Alps on Sunday (local time) after parachuting off mountains in their wingsuits.
Their deaths bring to four the number of people killed taking part in the extreme sport in France this month.
Police said the first victim, a 33-year-old Australian, died after jumping off the 2,600-metre Brevent peak in the Haute-Savoie.
Rescue workers said he was found "several hundred metres below in a wooded area" and probably died on impact.
Two hours later, a French base jumper was killed after hitting a rock face on his descent from Mont Granier in the neighbouring Isere region of southeastern France.
The man, aged 52 and described as "extremely experienced", was found 200 metres below the ledge from which he had jumped.
"He managed [to] get over the first rock face, but not the second," one of the rescuers said.
Investigations have been launched into both accidents.
The Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade is providing consular assistance to the family of the Australian man.
On August 6, two base jumpers, one from Switzerland, the other from France, died in similar accidents in the Alps and French Pyrenees.
A base jump is defined as a leap off a fixed high point - the name being an acronym for building, antenna, span (such as bridges) and earth (natural settings).
Unlike skydiving, which involves leaping from an aircraft, base jumpers take off with a parachute from a fixed point, usually a cliff or a bridge.
The sport carries high risks. A Norwegian study published in 2007 concluded that base jumping was five to eight times more likely than skydiving to result in injury or death.