The body positions of the hikers on the slope are well in the scope of how people dying from hypothermia are found. There are numerous pictures to be found of recent deaths from hypothermia in a number of modern journals. They are clinical and evidenced based sources for medical people sharing resources . A number of the pictures show very similar body positions to all the hikers apart from the ravine 4.
But Slobodin had been hit hard on both sides of his head, one side hard enough to crack his skull. This isn't hypothermia. This is why I chose to ask about Slobodin in particular; what could have caused his head trauma?
Good question as always amishila , I was trying to formulate a response , it's just way out of my knowledge base . I have to Google each medical word , get a definition, translate the dyatlovpass interpretation in English, look at in Russian and also translate the Russian version. There's lots of small errors and it's difficult to go back and forth , copy and paste and the site seems to keep lagging.
Anyhow ...... Here's some thoughts from reading other forums / documents etc. We must also remember that hypothermia is difficult to determine even today but there's been progress in gathering data with modern research and technology.
The autopsy :
it says what it says, a bang/ blow to the head , falling is put forward for the main suspected reason. Logical enough I suppose.
Quite a possible explanation, there were reports of the searchers injuring themselves on the slope , if I remember correctly one had to be taken for medical treatment the injury was that serious, another was one of the students I think but that was from skiing. The slope is known to get slippy and falls for well equipped healthy people without the detrimental effect and onset of hypothermia still manage to get in trouble.
There is zero question that Slobodin would have been feeling the effects of hypothermia. Being the fittest or strongest does not mean much against the cold , DNA and being a fat person may have helped more. It all depends on the affect of the temperature loss and the following decision making .
hypothermia is most likely the cause of Slobodin's death and that is why we get stuck. If he was fit and healthy and marching up, or down the slope or perhaps standing still , would he have died ? I think he probably would have eventually,if the weather is cold etc.
So if slobodin was feeling the effects of heat loss as he had been exposed to the cold for a certain time , it is possible that he started to fail ( as did the others) . A crack to the head on a slope where stones stick out is possible, especially when your reactions are dulled . I've mentioned the incident in the UK about the teacher with frostbite crawling in the snow to try to get help, her legs were frozen bent and her hands were frozen and clenched when the helicopter team found her alive .
All of the Dyatlov group were probably in the same situation and losing heat. It's just a countdown really unless you can get warm and warm quickly. If you can't strike matches , button your clothing or use your hands , you're in trouble . The mention of falling would be more of a trip , than a fall but if your body is not working, I would suspect the hands would be clenched in fists to stop any fall if the arms would even move at any great speed .
There's other theory's too, and that is the freezing of bloods and fluids in the brain . This is to do with the expansion of the freezing fluid and the potential cracking and distortion of the skull. It has been recorded to have occurred in freezing patients in controlled conditions , medical labs etc. But it is the lower internal part of the skull which is thinner.
Now, I've tried to work out the difference of all the words , as to what's a bruise v hemorrhage , the muscle names etc etc. And there does seem to be links to hemorrhage and hypothermia. Diffuse hemorrhage ,fluid around the sack of the lungs and a host of other things are linked to hypothermia , it's something to do with the muscles over working when shivering and the way blood looses it's properties and viscosity in the cold. It tends to be the bigger muscle groups tho there is some mention of the temporal muscles . So , I'm still trying to workout what it's all about by being able to take possibilities away , which I can't seem to do. I don't know if these injuries represent a whack to both sides of the skull or just part of bleeding.
The autopsies don't seem to be covering anything up , it's just research on these types of cases and death from hypothermia don't have many examples to study, especially in 1959.
There is quite a bit in the ravine 4 autopsy that does suggest crushing and asphyxiation. In very very basic terms ( as I don't really know what I'm talking about) , the blood, fluids , veins , blood around the heart etc are found in landslide victims.