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Swiss Village Wiped Off As Glacier Collapse Triggers Deadly Mudslide
Swiss Village Wiped Off As Glacier Collapse Triggers Deadly Mudslide

News18

time5 days ago

  • Climate
  • News18

Swiss Village Wiped Off As Glacier Collapse Triggers Deadly Mudslide

Last Updated: Within a few seconds, the collapse transformed the once-picturesque village into a debris wasteland. A catastrophic landslide triggered by the partial collapse of the Birch Glacier in the Swiss Alps buried almost the entire of Blatten, a small Alpine village in Switzerland's Valais Canton. A deluge of ice, mud and rock crashed down a mountain on Wednesday, engulfing some 90% of the village of Blatten. Dramatic footage from May 28 showed massive dust clouds filling the valley as the glacier collapsed, with a torrent of mud and boulders engulfing the hillsides and much of the village. Aerial footage of Blatten in Switzerland after glacier collapse. — Disasters Daily (@DisastersAndI) May 29, 2025 The village's 300 residents were already evacuated earlier in May after part of the mountain behind the Birch Glacier began to crumble. Within a few seconds, the collapse transformed the once-picturesque village into a debris wasteland. The landslide also buried the Lonza River bed, raising concerns about potential flooding from dammed water flows. Rescue teams with search dogs and thermal drone scans have continued looking for a missing 64-year-old man but have found nothing. Local police suspended the search on Thursday afternoon, saying the debris mounds were too unstable for now. Swiss glaciologists attribute the accelerating glacier thaw to climate change, which has increased the risk of such disasters. The debris, estimated at 9 million metric tonnes, has left the village largely uninhabitable, with recovery expected to take years. Werner Bellwald, a 65-year-old cultural studies expert, lost the wooden family house built in 1654 where he lived in Ried, a hamlet next to Blatten also wiped out by the deluge. 'You can't tell that there was ever a settlement there," he told Reuters. 'Things happened there that no one here thought were possible." The Lonza River, which flows through the village, was dammed by the landslide, creating a large artificial lake and raising fears of downstream flooding. 'The water from the River Lonza cannot flow down the valley because there is an enormous plug," Raphael Mayoraz, a cantonal geologist, told Swiss national broadcaster SRF, saying floods in downstream villages were a possibility. Breaking:A glacier collapse has buried the Swiss village of Blatten under mud. 💔The Lonza River is dammed and large parts of the town have been evacuated. Tragic — but thanks to early warnings from scientists, lives were likely saved. #Switzerland #Blatten #ClimateCrisis … — The Curious Quill (@PleasingRj) May 29, 2025 Up to 1 million cubic meters of water are accumulating daily as a result of the debris damming up the river, said Christian Huggel, a professor of environment and climate at the University of Zurich. Matthias Ebener, a spokesperson for local authorities, said that buildings which had emerged intact from the landslide are now flooded and that some residents of neighbouring villages had been evacuated as a precaution. Approximately 90 per cent of Blatten has been destroyed or buried. 'What I can tell you at the moment is that about 90 per cent of the village is covered or destroyed, so it's a major catastrophe that has happened here in Blatten," said Stephane Ganzer, head of security for the Valais region. The incident has revived concern about the impact of rising temperatures on Alpine permafrost which has long frozen gravel and boulders in place, creating new mountain hazards. For years, the Birch Glacier has been creeping down the mountainside, pressured by shifting debris near the summit. Matthias Huss, head of the Glacier Monitoring in Switzerland (GLAMOS), pointed to the likely influence of climate change in loosening the rock mass in the permafrost zone, which triggered the collapse. (With inputs from agencies) First Published:

Video: Swiss Village Nearly Wiped Out After Glacier Collapse Causes Catastrophic Landslide
Video: Swiss Village Nearly Wiped Out After Glacier Collapse Causes Catastrophic Landslide

NDTV

time5 days ago

  • Climate
  • NDTV

Video: Swiss Village Nearly Wiped Out After Glacier Collapse Causes Catastrophic Landslide

A catastrophic landslide triggered by the partial collapse of the Birch Glacier buried approximately 90% of Blatten, a small Alpine village in Switzerland's Valais Canton, BBC reported. Dramatic footage from May 28 shows massive dust clouds filling the valley as the glacier collapsed, with a torrent of mud and boulders engulfing the hillsides and much of the village, which had a population of around 300. Authorities had been warning of a potential collapse for weeks due to visible cracks in the ice, and earlier this month, the village of around 300 residents and livestock was evacuated. One person, a 64-year-old man, remains missing, and officials have reported no deaths so far. The Cantonal Police of Valais said that a search and rescue operation was underway for the missing man. The landslide also buried the Lonza River bed, raising concerns about potential flooding from dammed water flows. Aerial footage of Blatten in Switzerland after glacier collapse. — Disasters Daily (@DisastersAndI) May 29, 2025 Breaking: A glacier collapse has buried the Swiss village of Blatten under mud. 💔 The Lonza River is dammed and large parts of the town have been evacuated. Tragic — but thanks to early warnings from scientists, lives were likely saved. #Switzerland #Blatten #ClimateCrisis … — The Curious Quill (@PleasingRj) May 29, 2025 Swiss glaciologists attribute the accelerating glacier thaw to climate change, which has increased the risk of such disasters. The debris, estimated at 9 million metric tonnes, has left the village largely uninhabitable, with recovery expected to take years. Neighbouring villages have also faced partial evacuations due to the ongoing threat of flooding. "We've lost the village, but not the heart. We will support each other and console each other. After a long night, it will be morning again," said Matthias Bellwald, Blatten's mayor, reflecting the community's resilience amid the devastation. Martin Henzen, another Blatten resident, said he was still trying to process what had occurred and did not want to speak for others in the village, saying, "Most are calm, but they're affected." Raphael Mayoraz, a cantonal geologist, noted that while preparations had been made for a natural disaster, they weren't adequate for the scale of destruction caused by the glacier collapse. He warned of potential flooding in downstream villages due to the massive plug blocking the River Lonza's flow. Local authorities have requested support from the Swiss army's disaster relief unit, and members of the Swiss government are on their way to the scene. Officials said at a news conference on Wednesday that it would take years to recover from the damage, which they were continuing to assess. A Warning? The devastating glacier collapse is a stark reminder of the alarming rate of glacier retreat in the Swiss Alps, driven by climate change. Swiss glaciologists have reported unprecedented ice loss in recent years, with 6% of the country's glacier volume disappearing in 2022 and another 4% in 2023. Raphael Mayoraz, head of natural hazard management in Valais canton, warned that Switzerland is particularly vulnerable to glacier loss, stating, "These events are not just natural — they're warnings." This incident follows the recent discovery of five skier bodies on another Swiss glacier near Zermatt, underscoring the growing risks in alpine regions.

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