More than half a mile of sheer granite, bloodied hands, and falling ice were no match for climbers Tommy Caldwell and Kevin Jorgeson, who completed arguably the most difficult climb of the century Wednesday in Yosemite National Park.
Using only their hands and feet, the pair summited the Dawn Wall, a sheer expanse of rock nearly 3,000 feet tall spanning the face of the El Capitan rock formation in California. Caldwell, 36, and Jorgeson, 30, began climbing on Dec. 27 and are the first people to scale the expanse of the Dawn Wall without the aid of ropes and without resting on the valley floor below.
The feat came after five long years of planning and training — as well as failed attempts in 2010 and 2011. El Capitan was first summited in 1958 and many experience climbers have risen to the challenge of climbing it, but no one has done so via the Dawn Wall. That challenge meant finding tiny holds the size of matchsticks and, at one point, making a sideways leap, according to The New York Times.









