The video shows a camera’s eye-view of the ascent, with the climber panting as he said in Japanese: “I’m rushing to the peak.”

He complains repeatedly about his cold hands, which he tries to warm, at one point saying he has stuck them under his arms.

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“My fingers are losing sensation. I wish I had brought a smartphone holder. It’s in my pocket,” he said. “My fingers are killing me. Let’s warm them up.”

Then the path becomes narrower, with a fence on the left, before sloping down.

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“Oh, it’s slippery. It’s so slippery. It’s dangerous,” he said, laughing.

“Here are rocks. We can follow the rocks. It’s pretty dangerous. I can climb down by sliding,” he said. “It’s steep. The path is covered with snow. . . . Am I on the right path? I’m slipping! Here, it’s also dangerous with this slope.”

Finally, he said only, “slipping.”

The sound of his slide can be heard on the video, along with a jumble of images including his boots, climbing poles and a smartphone before it ends in a freeze-frame of the snow, rock and part of a blue pole.

In the video, a woman’s voice can also be heard, but it seems to be coming from his phone.

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Police said they had received several calls from viewers watching the man’s ascent, public broadcaster NHK reported.

Police sent a helicopter to look for the climber, while a 10-member rescue team began scouring the area on Tuesday morning, finding signs of a fall that day but no body.

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Now police from Shizuoka prefecture say they have found a body but have not yet identified it, NHK reported.

The climbing season for the 3,776-meter (12,388-foot) peak ended Sept. 10, with the official website advising that trails and huts are closed after this date and that it is “very dangerous” to climb the mountain during this period.

The U.S. Embassy says that some climbers nevertheless attempt to climb the mountain during the offseason, adding that every year, “a number of climbers — including Americans — are killed while attempting to climb Mount Fuji.”

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In August, a Russian woman was killed by a falling rock.

The first snow was observed on Mount Fuji on Oct. 22, which was 22 days later than in an average year and 26 days later than in 2018, according to Japanese news media.