Switzerland and Italy have redrawn their Alpine border due to rapidly melting glaciers, particularly around the Matterhorn. As climate change accelerates glacier retreat, natural ridgelines that once ...
Despite 30 percent more snowfall last winter, Swiss glaciers couldn't avoid the effects of record summer heat and Saharan ...
Even if global warming is limited to 1.5 degrees Celsius under the 2015 Paris Agreement, the world still stands to lose ...
Melting glaciers changed the topography of a roughly 330-foot-long segment of the border between Italy and Switzerland.
Part of the border will be redrawn because of the glacial melt, in another sign of how much humans are changing the world by ...
The glaciers in Switzerland experienced an accelerated melting this year, exceeding the average of recent years, according to ...
The pace of glacial melting is accelerating alarmingly, and the world’s poor will be the first to suffer, but too few are ...
Global warming is causing all Alpine glaciers to recede, affecting natural boundaries and changing mountain routes.
The increasing rate of glacier melt has meant Switzerland's border with Italy has been redrawn — here's why, and how.
Global warming is melting glaciers, forcing Switzerland and Italy to review their borders, which have agreed to change their ...
While national boundaries are often thought of as fixed, large sections of the Swiss-Italian border are defined by glaciers and snow fields. “With the melting of the glaciers, these natural ...