According to the report
'We have managed to discover the traces of eight or nine people in about one kilometer from the tent along the slope, after which the traces go cold. One man was in boots, one had socks and the rest were barefoot."
But
Yuri Doroshenko: He was wearing different set of wool socks on both feet, socks on left foot were burned
Yuri Krivonischenko: torn sock on his left foot.
Igor Dyatlov: He had one cotton sock on his left foot, and one woolen sock on his right foot.
Zinaida Kolmogorova: Three pairs of socks. Two pairs were thin, then the third pair was woolen with insoles inside
Rustem Slobodin: four pairs of socks, and one felt boot (valenka) on his right foot.
Ludmila Dubinina: two pairs of warm sock. A third sock was not paired.
Semyon Zolotaryov: His legs were protected by a pair of socks and a pair of warm leather hand made shoes
Aleksander Kolevatov : home knitted woolen socks with sights of fire damage. His right foot was also protected by a light sock
underneath a woolen one. His left foot had similar three socks
Nikolay Thibeaux-Brignolle:On his feet he wore hand-knitted woolen socks and a pair of felt boots
seems strange to me and shows we can't put too much stock in the reports or the autopsy or both
It is necessary to analyse carefully all what is written.
Maslennikov
“When we finished taking inventory of the tent’s contents, we moved it to the helicopter pad, about 600-700 m away.” Radiogram: “We managed to identify footprints of eight or nine people starting from the tent and going about 1 km down the slope, and then they were lost. One person was in boots, the others were only in socks and barefoot.”
Slobtsov
”There were footprints of bare feet, but in socks. Some were from valenki, and occasionally we could make out the tread of a ski boot. All of these prints were raised higher than the actual wind-scoured surface of the slope. We followed these prints from the tent in the direction of a spreading cedar, which was clearly prominent on the hill. First we lost, and then we found, the tracks again. They appeared again in the birch-tree undergrowth, and then they went down along the ravine which led to the Lozva River.”
Brusnitsyn
”Footprints can be preserved in the mountains because of the way the wind works there. You see the prints not as lowered imprints, but rather as raised columns, because the snow under the print is left compacted and cannot be eroded by the wind, but the area around it is scoured by the wind. Then the sunrise makes the print area become even firmer, and in this way it can be preserved for the entire winter.”
Captain Chernyshev
”When they crossed a stony ridge where the tracks disappeared, but further down they appeared again, and then they were lost. The prints were very distinct. In some of the prints one could see whether the person was barefoot or in socks because you could see the toes.”
Captain Chernyshev states that you could see the toes. And Slobtsov states that there were footprints of bare feet, but in socks. But non of the Dyatlov Group appeared to have actually been barefoot ! ?