The body was suspected of being a member of the late Min Joon-young (36 years old) and Park Jong-sung (42 years old) members of the Jik-jung corps who disappeared after climbing the Himalayan Annapurna Hiun Chuli (6,441 meters above sea level) 10 years ago.

An official of the Jik Ji-jung says he was informed two days ago by a member of the Nepal Mountaineering Association that two suspected bodies were found missing.

The founder's mountaineering clothing brand is said to be identical to the clothes worn by the two crew members, and many Korean-related belongings were reported.

The body was reported to have been discovered by a local resident on the 23rd month of the northern wall of Hiunchully, where the ice melted.

This is where two crew members are missing.

The body has been transferred to Annapurna Base Camp by Nepal Mountaineering Association.

The survivors of the two crews and their supporters depart for Nepal on the 12th to confirm the identity of the bodies found.

Identification will likely be possible between 13 and 14 days.

Park Yeon-su (55), who was in charge of the expedition at the time, said, "I had previously found traces of two crew members, but the body is the first time."

He said, "There are only two people who are missing in the vicinity of the body where they are found," said Min Joon-young and Park Jong-sung.

The Jikji Support Team is a climbing platform formed in 2006 to promote the world's oldest jikji among printed metal type prints through the overseas expedition of Chungbuk Mountain Rescue Team.

The late Min Joon-young and Park Jong-sung, as members of the Jik-jung juncture in September 2009, set out to pioneer the 'jikji route', a new route on the northern wall of Hiun Chuli, and finally communicated with the base camp at 5,400m above sea level on the 25th of the month. I went missing.

In June 2008, a year before their disappearance, they climbed a Himalayan 6235m-class cotton rod to create the only Korean name, Jikji-bong.

The Pakistani government approved the name of the peak as Jikjibong on July 27 of the same year.

(Photo: Providing direct support corps)