WilliamBoyd
Hero Member
When I saw this story in the news it brought back memories of when I was an active California Sierra Nevada hiker and climber in the 1970s and 1980s. I climbed Mt. Williamson three times during that period. Mt. Williamson at 14,379' is the second highest mountain in California and is visible from much of Highway 395.
Mt. Williamson
On October 7, 2019, two hikers climbing Mount Williamson, discovered human remains near the far side of the "Williamson Bowl". The Inyo County Sheriff’s Office was contacted. Due to the remote location and difficult terrain, aerial support was required to transport a Sheriff’s Office Investigator.
News article:
https://www.sierrawave.net/decades-old-human-remains-discovered-on-mount-williamson
The Inyo County Sheriff’s Office does not have any missing persons reports connected to this location, and based on the condition of the remains, it is believed that the body may have been in this area for quite some time – perhaps decades.
"This is a huge mystery to us," said Inyo County Sheriff’s Department spokeswoman Carma Roper, since they’ve gone back through decades of missing persons reports from the Inyo National Forest with no matches.
For what it's worth, here is a possible historical clue:
The World War II Manzanar Japanese Internment Camp was located to the east of Mt. Williamson.
Manzanar camp gate with historic marker
A Sierra Club trip leader told me in the 1980's that during World War II Japanese inmates of the Manzanar Camp would sometimes take deceased inmates and bury them in the Mt. Williamson area which was behind the camp.
Mt. Williamson
On October 7, 2019, two hikers climbing Mount Williamson, discovered human remains near the far side of the "Williamson Bowl". The Inyo County Sheriff’s Office was contacted. Due to the remote location and difficult terrain, aerial support was required to transport a Sheriff’s Office Investigator.
News article:
https://www.sierrawave.net/decades-old-human-remains-discovered-on-mount-williamson
The Inyo County Sheriff’s Office does not have any missing persons reports connected to this location, and based on the condition of the remains, it is believed that the body may have been in this area for quite some time – perhaps decades.
"This is a huge mystery to us," said Inyo County Sheriff’s Department spokeswoman Carma Roper, since they’ve gone back through decades of missing persons reports from the Inyo National Forest with no matches.
For what it's worth, here is a possible historical clue:
The World War II Manzanar Japanese Internment Camp was located to the east of Mt. Williamson.
Manzanar camp gate with historic marker
A Sierra Club trip leader told me in the 1980's that during World War II Japanese inmates of the Manzanar Camp would sometimes take deceased inmates and bury them in the Mt. Williamson area which was behind the camp.