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Thread started 05 Sep 2009 (Saturday) 08:01
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Morteratsch glacier, Switzerland

 
DDA
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Sep 05, 2009 08:01 |  #1

These pictures are form the Morteratsch glacier. It is a place that I love in winter as much as in summer...

Wikipedia wrote:
The Morteratsch Glacier (romansh: Vadret da Morteratsch) is the largest glacier by area in the Bernina Range of the Bündner Alps in Switzerland.
It is, just after the Pasterze Glacier and Gepatschferner, the third largest and by volume (1.2 km³) the most massive glacier in the eastern alps. The Morteratsch Glacier is a typical valley glacier with a pronounced ice front. The accumulation zone lies between the peaks of Piz Morteratsch, Piz Bernina, Crast' Agüzza, Piz Argient, Piz Zupò and Bellavista. From Piz Argient to the ice front in the Val Morteratsch, its horizontal extent is about approx. 7 km, with an altitude difference of up to 2,000 m. Together with the Pers Glacier, originating at Piz Palü, which joins the Morteratsch just below the rock formation Isla Persa ("Lost Isle"), it covers an area of about 16 km². The volume of the ice is estimated to be about 1.2 km³. The Morteratsch Glacier drains through Inn River and Danube into the Black Sea.
In spring, depending on the snow conditions, a 10-km-long ski-run accessible to skilled skiers is marked on the glacier. It leads from the Diavolezza aerial tramway terminus to the Morteratsch inn and has an altitude difference of 1100 m. The RhB Station Morteratsch used to be situated directly at the ice front of the glacier. The ice front has receded over 1800 m in the meantime, and cannot be seen from the station today.
Yearly length change measurements have been recorded since 1878. For the period to 1998, the overall retreat was over 1.8 km with a mean annual retreat rate of approximately 17.2 m/y. This long-term average has markedly increased in recent years, receding 30 m/y from 1999-2005. Substantial retreat was ongoing through 2006 as well.[1]
During the time that measurements have been taken, the glacier has advanced a few meters in only four years. Since the large glaciers react slowly to short-term climate changes, these advances cannot be accounted for by increased precipitation in the accumulation zone. On the high morraines to the left and right of the ice front, which are still nearly free of overgrowth, the enormous quantities of ice which were still being pushed down here at the end of the "Little Ice Age" in the middle of the 19th century can be seen.


Unfortunately, this glacier retreats at an incredible speed...

This sign shows where the front of the glacier was in 1920. Look at how far it is now

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Getting closer...

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A rock broken byy the freezing/thawing cycles...

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Some small flowers coming back once the ice is gone...

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View from the glacier toward the valley

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View of the river flowing under the glacier....

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.... and coming back out at the glacier's front!

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A last view of the glacier

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More pictures are on my website (external link)...

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Belmondo
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Sep 05, 2009 08:46 |  #2

Lovely photos, Didier. You certainly live in a beautiful country.


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Cyclop
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Sep 05, 2009 09:09 |  #3

Great series!


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jgrussell
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Sep 05, 2009 10:50 |  #4

Nice series, and the river shots are terrific.


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Becky ­ N
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Sep 05, 2009 11:46 |  #5

Very nice Didier. Wonderful thing to see and share.


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CARSJ
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Sep 05, 2009 13:56 |  #6

Nice photographs, but most of them could us a bit more contrast in my opinion




  
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DDA
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Sep 05, 2009 15:18 |  #7

Thanks everyone!

As for the contrast, I agree. It looked more contrassty on my monitor before the upload. The loss of contrast must be due to some kind of magic happening during the upload to the gallery :o


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3Turner
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Sep 05, 2009 23:48 |  #8

Great set Didier...thanks for sharing. Especially that first shot that showed the line of the glacier way back when.


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Brandonsfocus
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Sep 06, 2009 00:18 |  #9

DDA wrote in post #8589837 (external link)
Thanks everyone!

As for the contrast, I agree. It looked more contrassty on my monitor before the upload. The loss of contrast must be due to some kind of magic happening during the upload to the gallery :o

The difference between your monitor/computer and what the internet collectively uses as photographic standards are two entirely different animals. So...don't feel embarrassed. It's not your fault! The internet is designed for efficiency which almost always means data loss from the original content.

Nice photos! Funny...I had just edited a bunch of photos that I took of Jungfrau Youch today that I had seemed to have forgotten about. I am very eager to get back to Switzerland. Thanks for sharing!


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tigerotor77w
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Sep 06, 2009 20:43 |  #10

Nicely done!


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DDA
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Sep 10, 2009 01:18 |  #11

Thank you!


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Morteratsch glacier, Switzerland
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