Old Jedi,
I think you should read your own posts . GlennM is his own person although we share a common thought that the incident was most likely caused by some weather related incident. I have also favoured the wolverine, Glennm has disagreed and shared his thoughts, Glennm has also explored rockets and gas along with other theories, everyone has.
I am trying to narrow the possibilities and I was hoping Marc would share or evolve the debate as it was his post that prompted my post and not yours. Also the title of the thread is regarding an avalanche.
I don't think GlennM was taking the "p***" and you have mentioned this before.
When I say" basically" it means ;
used to indicate that a statement summarizes the most important aspects, or gives a roughly accurate account, of a more complex situation
It is just a thought process, you could quite easily have interjected saying you wanted to add a fourth possibility and ran with it . Internal fighting has been discussed before and if I remember correctly it didn't lead anywhere but there does exist examples of fallouts on other hikes .
I'm not sure if the radio they took was Igor's, building the stove was nothing new and wasn't a new amazing invention as other tourists did the same , yes he may have built it as some hot tenters do today out of scraps.
If you read the kramlin expedtion report from front to back it will give an insight about the nature of tourism, stoves, Mansi signs, how they organised the hike,food logistics , people that couldn't make a particular hike as they had other duties or had to work ,exactly the same as the dyatov's .
So, "in my opinion" there doesn't seem to be anything unusual about the Dyatlov hike. They planned their trip, people were invited , some choose this hike and other students choose other hikes and others couldn't attend,They were late and made mistakes, missed busses/trains, stayed in a school and chatted to the students, they bought things along the way and talked of romance , films and met new people , everything that they have done before on other hikes . The danger of the hike is it's distance from immediate help , camping in a tent in the snow in itself is not particularly hazardous, many tourists have done such things , in every country,and in the 1950's it was a positive pastime including today . Many people do such hikes without getting a graded certificate but like the scouts and students for example, organisations create a pathway for experience and recognition of skills.
Obviously, everyone has scrutinized every angle of the Dyatlov pass but nothing new has stood out other than teddy's approach in the last couple of years , in fact teddy's book would be the best place to start.
Perhaps start your own thread and list all the possible reasons for leaving the tent ? Remember to add IMO though.