Sunday, Apr 30, 2006
Even the Swiss glaciers are melting
The Jungfrau massif with the view point terrace Sphinx, center, surrounded by the Aletsch glacier in Switzerland. (AP/Keystone, Martin Ruetschi, File)
ON THE ALETSCH GLACIER, Switzerland (AP) - It's cold in the snow up at 1,981 metres, even with sunshine pouring down from almost cloudless skies. Skiers schuss their way down for well-earned lunches and there's a smile on almost every face in this wintery wonderland.
Yet looking over the colossal sweep of the Aletsch glacier, a remnant of the last Ice Age snaking down through a deep valley below the peaks of the Bernese Oberland, the picture appears far different - and warmer.
The river of ice has retreated 3.4 kilometres since peaking at a length of 22.5 kilometres in 1860, estimates Hanspeter Holzhauser, a geographer at the
link
Even the Swiss glaciers are melting
The Jungfrau massif with the view point terrace Sphinx, center, surrounded by the Aletsch glacier in Switzerland. (AP/Keystone, Martin Ruetschi, File)
ON THE ALETSCH GLACIER, Switzerland (AP) - It's cold in the snow up at 1,981 metres, even with sunshine pouring down from almost cloudless skies. Skiers schuss their way down for well-earned lunches and there's a smile on almost every face in this wintery wonderland.
Yet looking over the colossal sweep of the Aletsch glacier, a remnant of the last Ice Age snaking down through a deep valley below the peaks of the Bernese Oberland, the picture appears far different - and warmer.
The river of ice has retreated 3.4 kilometres since peaking at a length of 22.5 kilometres in 1860, estimates Hanspeter Holzhauser, a geographer at the
link