Dan Fredinburg, a Google Inc. executive based in California, was among those killed on Saturday in an avalanche on Mount Everest caused by a devastating earthquake in Nepal, the company said.
Fredinburg was climbing the world’s tallest peak with three other Google employees when the avalanche struck. None of his colleagues was injured, Lawrence You, a company official, said in a statement.
Fredinburg, a Google veteran, was head of privacy at Google X, a research division at the Mountain View, California-based company.
Fredinburg suffered a major head injury during an avalanche, his sister Megan said on social media. “His soul and his spirit will live on in so many of us,” she said on an Instagram posting.
Fredinburg, an experienced climber, was making his ascent up Everest with Jagged Globe, a company that organizes mountain treks. In confirming Fredinburg’s death, the company said that two other team members suffered injuries that were not life-threatening in the avalanche that struck its base camp.
The U.S. State Department said on Sunday that two other Americans were killed in the quake, including a woman who died at the base camp on Mount Everest.
The woman, Marisa Eve Girawong, was a physician’s assistant who worked for Madison Mountaineering, a Seattle-based guide service, according to Kurt Hunter, the company’s co-founder and chief technology officer.
“She was quite beloved by our entire team,” Hunter said in a telephone interview on Sunday. “We’re deeply saddened by her loss.”
Girawong, who was from Edison, New Jersey, according to media reports, was among more than a dozen people who perished in the Mount Everest avalanche.
Information about the third American killed was not immediately available.
An Indian army mountaineering team found 18 bodies on Everest, an army official said. Nepal’s Tourism Ministry could only confirm 10 deaths, but a spokesman said that the death toll could rise, and that the avalanche had buried part of the base camp.
Saturday’s quake, centered between Nepal’s two largest cities Kathmandu and Pokhara, was the strongest to hit the impoverished nation of 28 million people in 81 years and killed more than 2,400 people.


