logo
Mountains are among the planet's most beautiful places. They're also becoming the deadliest

Mountains are among the planet's most beautiful places. They're also becoming the deadliest

Yahoo07-06-2025
Jan Beutel was half-watching a live stream of Kleines Nesthorn, a mountain peak in the Swiss Alps, when he realized its cacophony of creaks and rumbles was getting louder. He dropped his work, turned up the sound and found himself unable to look away.
'The whole screen exploded,' he said.
Beutel, a computer engineer specializing in mountain monitoring, had just witnessed a glacier collapse. On May 28, an avalanche of millions of tons of ice and rock barreled down the slope, burying Blatten, a centuries-old village nestled in the valley below.
Local authorities had already evacuated the village after parts of the mountain had crumbled onto the glacier; a 64-year old man believed to have stayed remains missing.
But no one expected an event of this magnitude.
Successive rock avalanches onto the glacier increased the pressure on the ice, causing it to melt faster and the glacier to accelerate, eventually destabilizing it and pushing it from its bed. The collapse was sudden, violent and catastrophic. 'This one just left no moment to catch a breath,' Beutel said.
The underlying causes will take time to unravel. A collapse of this magnitude would have been set in motion by geological factors going back decades at least, said Matthias Huss, a glaciologist at the Swiss university ETH Zürich.
But it's 'likely climate change is involved,' he said, as warming temperatures melt the ice that holds mountains together. It's a problem affecting mountains across the planet.
People have long been fascinated with mountains for their dramatic beauty. Some make their homes beneath them — around 1 billion live in mountain communities — others are drawn by adventure, the challenge of conquering peaks.
These majestic landscapes have always been dangerous, but as the world warms, they are becoming much more unpredictable and much deadlier.
'We do not fully understand the hazard at the moment, nor how the dangers are changing with climate change,' said David Petley, an Earth scientist at the University of Hull in England.
Snowy and icy mountains are inherently sensitive to climate change.
Very high mountains are etched with fractures filled with ice — called permafrost — which glues them together. As the permafrost thaws, mountains can become destabilized. 'We are seeing more large rock slope collapses in many mountains as a result,' Petley told CNN.
Glaciers are also melting at a terrifyingly rapid rate, especially in regions such as the Alps and the Andes, which face the possibility of a glacier-free future. As these rivers of ancient ice disappear, they expose mountain faces, causing more rocks to fall.
There have been several big collapses in the Alps in recent years as ice melts and permafrost thaws.
In July 2022, about 64,000 tons of water, rock and ice broke off from the Marmolada Glacier in northern Italy after unusually hot weather caused massive melting. The subsequent ice avalanche killed 11 people hiking a popular trail.
In 2023, the peak of Fluchthorn, a mountain on the border between Switzerland and Austria, collapsed as permafrost thawed, sending more than 100,000 cubic meters of rock into the valley below.
'This really seems to be something new. There seems to be a trend in such big events in high mountain areas,' Huss said.
Melting glaciers can also form lakes, which can become so full that they burst their banks, sending water and debris cascading down mountainsides.
In 2023, a permafrost landslide caused a large glacial lake in Sikkim, India, to break its banks, causing a catastrophic deluge that killed at least 55 people. Last year, a glacial lake outburst caused destructive flooding in Juneau, Alaska — a now regular occurrence for the city.
After two years in a row of destructive glacial flooding, Juneau is scrambling to erect temporary flood barriers ahead of the next melting season, the Anchorage Daily News reported this week.
As well as melting ice, there's another hazard destabilizing mountains: rain.
Extreme precipitation is increasingly falling on mountains as rain instead of snow, said Mohammed Ombadi, an assistant professor at the University of Michigan College of Engineering. His research shows every 1 degree Celsius of global warming increases extreme rainfall events by 15%.
This pushes up the risks of flooding, landslides and soil erosion. Northern Hemisphere mountains will become 'hotspots' for extreme rain, Ombadi said.
Heavy rainfall this month in Sikkim, a Himalayan state in northern India, triggered a series of landslides, killing at least three people. Images show deep muddy scars carved into the mountain, with buildings and trees obliterated.
Scientists do have tools to monitor mountains and warn communities. 'There are fantastic instruments that can predict quite accurately when a rock mass (or) ice mass is going to come down,' Huss said. The difficulty is knowing where to look when a landscape is constantly changing in unpredictable ways.
'This is what climate change actually does… there are more new and previously unrecognized situations,' Huss said.
These are particularly hard to deal with in developing countries, which don't have the resources for extensive monitoring.
Scientists say the only way to reduce the impact of the climate crisis on mountains is to bring down global temperatures, but some changes are already locked in.
'Even if we manage to stabilize the climate right now, (glaciers) will continue to retreat significantly,' Huss said. Almost 40% of the world's glaciers are already doomed, according to a new study.
'We could have maybe avoided most of (the negative impacts) if we had acted 50 years ago and brought down CO2 emissions. But we failed,' Huss added.
The consequences are hitting as the numbers of people living in and visiting mountains increases. 'We're just more exposed than we used to be,' he said.
Ludovic Ravanel, an Alpine climber and geomorphologist who focuses on mountains' response to global warming, has a front line view of the increasing dangers of these landscapes.
Mountains are the 'most convincing' hotspots of climate change, he told CNN. When he's focused on the science, he keeps his emotions at arm's length. But as a father, and a mountaineer, it hits him.
'I see just how critical the situation is. And even then, we're only at the very beginning.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fei-Fei Li Challenges Silicon Valley's Obsession With AGI
Fei-Fei Li Challenges Silicon Valley's Obsession With AGI

Forbes

time5 hours ago

  • Forbes

Fei-Fei Li Challenges Silicon Valley's Obsession With AGI

Dr. Fei‑Fei Li sees AI not as a runaway superintelligent force but as a partner in human potential. Speaking with CNN's Matt Egan at the Ai4 conference in Las Vegas, she sketched a future where learning, spatial reasoning, and immersive digital worlds grow together. Empathy, curiosity, and responsibility, she said, should be the drivers. That's a very different tone from Geoffrey Hinton, who told the same audience just a day prior that our survival might one day depend on giving AI something like a mother's protective instinct. Li's focus stays on human decision-making, not on machines 'caring' for us. Reframing the Discussion of Superintelligence For Dr. Li, the quest for the superintelligent machine, or AGI, is not really separate from the concept of AI. She explained, 'I don't know the difference between the word AGI and AI. Because when Alan Turing and John McCarthy and Marvin Minsky, the founding fathers and thinkers of AI, when they dared humanity with this possibilities of machines that they can do, in my opinion, they didn't say that machines that think narrowly and non-generally. They literally just had the biggest imagination." To Li, AI isn't a race or a looming contest of strength. It's another step in building systems that work alongside people and protect the things we value. Hinton, in contrast, warns that machines could surpass human intelligence within a couple of decades and that keeping control will be nearly impossible. His proposal is to design them with an ingrained sense of care, modeled on a parent's concern for a child. However, Li doesn't think safety comes from simulating affection. For her, the safer path is to build strong oversight, good design, and values that put people first. Hinton often frames the challenge in terms of survival: keeping a powerful AI from harming or leaving us behind. Li puts her energy into making sure it improves the spaces we live and work in. Her concern is less about keeping pace with an adversary, more about shaping a collaborator. Hinton is less certain that human control will be possible at all if AI reaches superintelligence. That's why he argues for programming in care instincts from the start. Li's answer is to shape an AI's goals early, through design, oversight, and a clear sense of its role in serving people. Education as a Living Conversation Li reframed AI's role in education as an extension of the Socratic method, urging educators and parents to champion curiosity over shortcuts. Li talks about AI in classrooms the way some teachers talk about Socrates: a tool for asking questions that make you think harder. She wants students encouraged to probe and explore, not to lean on AI for quick answers. 'Prompting' in her view should be the start of an investigation, not the end of it. She pushes back against the reflexive link between AI and academic dishonesty. Too much energy, she says, goes into banning and blocking, and not enough into asking how the technology could make people better learners. Clear-Eyed About the Risks Li's optimism doesn't mean blind faith. She worries about AI being used to spread false information, the disruption of jobs, the huge amounts of energy needed to train the biggest models, and the risk that only a few benefit from gains in productivity. She doesn't think those outcomes are inevitable. They're problems to be solved starting with how we set goals, who gets to decide them, and how they're carried out. In her view, it's not enough to 'teach' AI to care. What matters is aligning its purpose with strong governance, fair access, and uses that make life better for people. That means designing from the ground up with those aims in mind. Through her startup World Labs, Li is working on what she calls 'spatial intelligence', which is AI that understands and creates three-dimensional spaces. The uses range from surgical teams working with greater precision to far-flung families celebrating together in virtual rooms. These aren't just fantasy backdrops. They're designed to improve real-world life by blending the physical and the digital in ways that feel natural. For Li, the point of technology is to give people more control over their own choices. AI, she says, should make decisions more transparent, not less. She believes everyone should keep their dignity and their right to question what they're told. Li talks about AI as a piece of global infrastructure, something that could change how we learn, create, and connect. She wants the story of this century to include the ways AI helped expand creativity, rethink education, and keep people at the center of the story, not just the ways we avoided catastrophe. Her vision casts AI as a partner in curiosity and progress, not as a ruler. It's aimed at building immersive worlds, richer conversations in classrooms, and tools that fit into human lives with respect for our choices. Dr. Li and Hinton have known each other for decades. She would agree with him on one point: intelligence, human and machine, will grow. Where they part ways is in the plan for that future. He would give AI the instincts of a caregiver. She would anchor it in the creativity, care, and shared purpose that humans bring. And she keeps coming back to the same idea: we decide how to live in the world we're building.

Study: Store-bought coffee has some contaminants, but remains safe
Study: Store-bought coffee has some contaminants, but remains safe

UPI

time7 hours ago

  • UPI

Study: Store-bought coffee has some contaminants, but remains safe

The Clean Label Project tested store-bought coffee and found it is mostly free of harmful levels of toxins and contaminants, but there's room for improvement. File Photo by Bill Greenblatt/UPI | License Photo Your morning coffee is mostly free from harmful levels of toxins and contaminants, but a new investigation shows there's room for improvement. "While some contaminants were present, most were found at minimal levels and well below the European Union's safety limits per 6-ounce serving. This means coffee is generally safe," Molly Hamilton, executive director of the nonprofit Clean Label Project, which led the testing, told CNN. Research has linked drinking about 3 cups of black coffee a day to a lower risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, liver disease, stroke, dementia and more. The Clean Label Project analyzed coffee from 45 popular brands grown in Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Kenya, Peru and Hawaii. More than 7,000 tests were run for pesticides, heavy metals, plasticizers and mold toxins. The results: Glyphosate: Traces of this widely used weed killer were found, along with "significant" amounts of aminomethylphosphonic acid, its byproduct. AMPA can persist in the environment and has been linked to DNA damage and liver inflammation. Phthalates: These plastic chemicals, linked to reproductive issues, childhood obesity, cancer and asthma, were detected in some coffees. Levels were highest in canned coffee, followed by pods, then bags. Heavy metals: Amounts varied by region, with African coffees having the lowest levels and Hawaiian coffees the highest, likely due to volcanic soil. Examples of heavy metals include lead, mercury and arsenic. Acrylamide: All samples contained small amounts of this chemical, which forms during roasting. It has been linked to cancer in animal studies but is not considered harmful to humans at low levels. Medium roasts had the most acrylamide, followed by light roasts, then dark roasts. Organic coffees generally had lower contaminant levels, but all 12 organic samples still contained AMPA. Hamilton said this could owe to runoff from nearby conventional farms. "Our next study is going to be analyzing the packaging assembly line," he said in a report from CNN. David Andrews is acting chief science officer for the Environmental Working Group. "The higher phthalate levels found in coffee pods and canned coffee suggest that packaging could be a meaningful source of exposure to these chemicals of concern," he told CNN. The National Coffee Association, however, pushed back, telling CNN that it's "highly irresponsible to mislead Americans about the safety of their favorite beverage." "Decades of independent scientific evidence show that coffee drinkers live longer, healthier lives," NCA President and CEO William "Bill" Murray said. Hamilton said coffee drinkers can limit contaminants by: Choosing darker or very light roasts Opting for coffee in bags or pods Considering where the coffee is grown "Caffeinated coffee is still one of the cleanest product categories we've ever tested," Hamilton said. "Our report isn't meant to raise alarm or keep consumers from drinking coffee, but rather to empower people on how to choose the cleanest, safest cup of coffee," he added. More information has more on light versus dark roast coffee. Copyright © 2025 HealthDay. All rights reserved.

Why Glacial Lake Outbursts Like the One in Alaska May Happen More Often
Why Glacial Lake Outbursts Like the One in Alaska May Happen More Often

Scientific American

time7 hours ago

  • Scientific American

Why Glacial Lake Outbursts Like the One in Alaska May Happen More Often

Meltwater from a glacier outburst near Juneau, Alaska, is flooding nearby neighborhoods, with officials urging some residents of the city of 30,000 to evacuate. The meltwater is rushing downstream from Suicide Basin, a basin of water dammed in by the Mendenhall Glacier. As of 6:00 A.M. local time on Wednesday morning, the Mendenhall River was in a major flood stage. At 16.17 feet (4.93 meters) and rising, the water level had passed the record flood stage of 15.99 feet (4.87 m) that hit during a 2024 glacial outburst flood, according to the National Weather Service. Mendenhall Lake and River, both downstream from the glacier's tongue, are under a flood warning. The NWS predicts the river will crest at up to 16.75 feet (5.1 m) Wednesday around 8 A.M. local time. On supporting science journalism If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today. Glacial outburst floods happen when the ice dams holding back glacial lakes fail, allowing a sudden release of water. They're unpredictable and happen without warning. A 2023 study found that globally, 15 million people live in areas that could flood. More than half of people in at-risk areas are in India, Pakistan, China, and Peru. And with a warming climate, ice is becoming more unstable and glacial lakes are growing—a 2020 study based on satellite imagery found that between 1990 and 2018, the volume of water dammed in glacial lakes had grown 48 percent. Suicide Basin has flooded before. In fact, according to the NWS, the basin has released an outburst flood at least once a year since 2011. These floods have now set a record three years in a row: In 2023, the river crested at 14.97 feet (4.56 m) after an outburst, a record exceeded just a year later in the August 2024 flood. Residents had to evacuate by inflatable boat in the middle of the night during the 2024 outburst, according to the Red Cross. Now, only a year after that disaster, the river is setting a new record. It's a threat glaciologists in mountainous areas around the world are trying to better understand, Fabian Walter, a senior scientist at the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL told Scientific American in 2020. "These glaciated mountain faces were more or less stable,' Walter said. 'And now, with climate change, the whole stability is changing."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store