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Stranded solo climber rescued from Yukon’s Mount Logan

Click to play video: 'Earthquakes strand climber on Canada’s highest peak Mt Logan'
Earthquakes strand climber on Canada’s highest peak Mt Logan
WATCH ABOVE: Earthquakes strand climber on Canada's highest peak Mt Logan – May 3, 2017

WHITEHORSE – A climber who was stranded on Canada’s highest mountain following an earthquake in Yukon has reportedly been rescued.

Natalia Martinez, 37, of Argentina, began a solo climb on Mount Logan in Kluane National Park and Reserve on April 22. Two large earthquakes on Monday caused avalanches near her camp.

A message posted by ExpeNews on its website – which is used by climbers, trekkers and outdoor enthusiasts to track their progress and location – said Martinez was successfully rescued in a three-hour operation that ended at about 10:30 p.m. local time. (1 a.m. ET).

Parks Canada had said Thursday that bad weather was preventing a rescue attempt, but ExpeNews said a pilot with the charter service Icefield Discovery was in the area and noticed an improvement in the conditions.

READ MORE: Climber making solo ascent on Canada’s highest mountain pinned by earthquakes in Yukon

ExpeNews said the pilot alerted a rescue team, and after checking with Martinez, it was decided to launch a rescue. The website said Martinez was taken to the Icefield Discovery base in Kluane Lake in southwest Yukon.

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Parks Canada spokeswoman Christine Aikens said earlier that officials were in close contact with Martinez – an experienced climber who reported that she still had a good supply of food and fuel.

Aikens said avalanches caused by the quakes had caused glacial ice to fall in the area of the climber’s camp, which is at 3,900-metre level on the east ridge of Mount Logan.

An average of 25 climbers try to summit the mountain every year, but Aikens said solo attempts are rare.

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