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Malcolm Slesser was a Scottish mountaineer, author, and lecturer. He was born on 30 October 1926 in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was educated at Edinburgh Academy and the University of Edinburgh. Slesser was an active mountaineer from the 1940s to the 1970s, and was a member of the Alpine Club and the Scottish Mountaineering Club. He was a pioneer of Himalayan mountaineering, and was the first to climb many peaks in the region. He was also a prolific author, writing several books on mountaineering and the Himalayas. Slesser was also a lecturer, and gave talks on mountaineering and the Himalayas at universities and other institutions. He was awarded the OBE in 1975 for his services to mountaineering. Slesser died on 28 April 2008, aged 81.

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Age 81 years old
Zodiac Sign Scorpio
Born 30 October, 1926
Birthday 30 October
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Date of death 26 June 2007
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 30 October. He is a member of famous with the age 81 years old group.

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Timeline

1990

Slesser pioneered the study of the potential for economic growth that led to methods for estimating the economic carrying capacity through the ECCO (Evaluation of Capital Creation Options also referred to as the Enhancement of Carrying Capacity or Economic Coordination Options) model of an economy uses the stocks-and-flows paradigm (aka system dynamics) to track energy and other natural capital flows through the economy. ECCO models were first developed by Malcolm Slesser in Edinburgh in the late 1990s along with Jay Baguant, Dr Anupam Saraph, Dr Wouter Biesiot, Dr Klass Jan Noorman and Jane King.

1962

The Pamirs expedition of 1962 was a difficult affair. Both the Alpine Club and the Scottish Mountaineering Club had been asking to climb in the Pamir Mountains of Central Asia, which were then part of the Soviet Union. Then John Hunt (of the Alpine Club) and Slesser (of the SMC) received telegrams from the Soviets granting permission for a party of 12 British climbers to mount an expedition to the Pamirs, provided the two joined forces. Slesser said of this: "It was a bit like proposing that North and South Korea should co-operate on making a nuclear bomb." In the event, Slesser and Hunt were joint leaders of the British party, which mounted a joint expedition with the Soviets with the goal of climbing Ismoil Somoni Peak. The animosity between the Scots and the English was exceeded by that between the British and the Soviets. Early on, two of the climbers – Robin Smith and Wilfrid Noyce – were killed, and Hunt went home. Slessor's best known book, Red Peak, chronicled the expedition.

1950

Slesser was a graduate of the University of Edinburgh. He began mountain climbing when he was young. In the 1950s Slesser joined an expedition to the Arctic. He wrote widely on mountain climbing and was considered to be an expert in the field.

1926

Malcolm Slesser (30 October 1926 – 26 June 2007) was a Scottish energy analyst, scientist and mountaineer.