Disappearing glaciers: Before and after views of Mont Blanc

By Guardian staff | October 16, 2019

Editor’s note: This story was originally published by The Guardian. It appears here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

In 1919, the Swiss pilot and photographer Walter Mittelholzer flew over Mont Blanc in a biplane photographing the alpine landscape. A century on, scientists have recreated his images to show the impact of global heating on the mountain’s glaciers.

Dr Kieran Baxter and Dr Alice Watterson from the University of Dundee used a process called monoplotting to work out the precise locations from which Mittelholzer had taken his photographs. They returned to the spot in a helicopter and lined up their cameras using the alpine peaks as their guide.

The scientists captured images of three glaciers that Mittelholzer had also photographed: the Bossons glacier, the Mer de Glace, and the Argentière glacier all on the northern side of the Mont Blanc massif.

The resulting photographs show just how much ice has been lost from the region over the past century.

Mont Blanc Bossons glacier, then and now.

Baxter said: “The scale of the ice loss was immediately evident as we reached altitude but it was only by comparing the images side-by-side that the last 100 years of change were made visible. It was both a breathtaking and heartbreaking experience, particularly knowing that the melt has accelerated massively in the last few decades.”

The Mer de Glace, the longest glacier in France, is the site of the biggest changes over past decades. In the 1800s, travel writers described how it could be seen from the resort town of Chamonix, but it has since receded more than 2km up the mountain’s slopes.

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The Mer de Glace “is now melting at the rate of around 40 metres a year and has lost 80 metres in depth over the last 20 years alone,” the glaciologist Luc Moreau told the Guardian last year.

How the Mer de Glace glacier has changed over a century.

Mittelholzer, who trained as a military pilot during the first world war, later became the director of a commercial aviation company that later became the Swiss national carrier, Swissair. He died in a climbing accident in 1937.

Baxter said: “Mittelholzer played a key role in popularising commercial air travel in Switzerland, an industry which ironically came to contribute to the warming of the climate – and the detriment of the alpine landscapes.”

The Dundee scientists said they were careful to keep their own impact on the environment to a minimum.

Argentière glacier: the change over a century.

 “When working at these heights there is currently no viable emission-free alternative so airtime is kept as brief as possible and careful planning goes into getting the most out of a photography flight like this one,” said Baxter.

“Luckily, clear weather allowed these repeat aerial photographs to be taken on the centenary year of the originals. Unless we drastically reduce our dependence on fossil fuels, there will be little ice left to photograph in another hundred years.”


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Adrienne Harrison
Adrienne Harrison
4 years ago

Can you provide the dates / seasons during which these contrasting photos were flown?

Thomas Gaulkin
Admin
4 years ago

The recent photos are from August of this year. The photos from 1919 appear to have been captured during flights around August 10 or 11.

Fatima
4 years ago

thanks for sharing

Suzanne B OConnell
Suzanne B OConnell
3 years ago

These are great. Thanks for doing this.

Jeffrey Pascal
Jeffrey Pascal
3 years ago

I skied the Mer de Glace in April 1981 and it was amazing. What a loss. . .