Front pages: Stories making headlines in Scotland on Thursday
Catch up on all the stories making headlines in Scotland.
The climber dead following an avalanche in the north Lochaber area of the Highlands has made The Daily Record front page, as well as a Scots school pupil questioned by the FBI after he hacked into their computer system.
As well as the climber killed in an avalanche, The Herald lead with the three elderly climbers who were stranded overnight in Dumfries, one of whom is confirmed dead.
The Daily Telegraph report David Cameron was warned he would have "no guarantee" European leaders would agree to his demands on EU reform, ahead of the Brussels summit today.
Again, The Scottish Sun lead with two climbers dead, one in Dumfries and one in Fort William, after a search was suspended for a couple who went missing on Ben Nevis.
Meanwhile Dundee's Courier report on moves to protect a £10m cash injection which could position the city as a key base for the multi-billion pound North Sea renewables and decommissioning sectors.
The National report Sturgeon told Westminster to clean up its own welfare mess, revealing the costs of Scotland taking on systems set up by Iain Duncan Smith could run to as much as £660 million.
In addition to Scottish Government plans to build a new emergency unit, the north east's Press and Journal lead with a surge in parking charges in Aberdeen to save £26m in the next council budget.
And The Guardian report David Cameron is facing a growing rift ahead of the Brussels summit - Boris Johnson has kept the prime minister waiting about whether he intends to support the campaign to keep Britain in a reformed EU.