
Meru Peak is located in the Himalayas in Nepal, a mountain with a lethal 20,000ft pinnacle
Mr Anker first tried the ascent in 2003. HIs team turned back two-thirds of the way up as a result of deep, unconsolidated snow and a lack of proper equipment for the upper wall. The following year set a new highpoint on the Fin at 6100m, but descended after one of the team broke both his legs.
Anker made his second attempt with Chin and Ozturk in 2008.
The team was delayed on the climb for several days during a storm but later they progressed beyond the highpoint of Anker's 2003 attempt.
But the team food supply had run short as a result of the storm and on their nineteenth day they stopped about 150 metres below summit. Chin vowed never to return.
The following year a Slovenian team attempted the same route but the weather meant they were unable to acclimatise on practise routes first.
Nevertheless, they decided to press ahead.
After the two-day approach the team turned aback, citing a lack of proper equipment, poor acclimatization and their alpine-style approach as mistakes for an attempt on the Shark's Fin.
After an epic 22-day climb up a near-vertical Himalayan peak, an Australian couple in their 40s took just two minutes to "fly" back to base camp and smash the world record for the highest BASE jump in history.