Mer de Glace

Mer de Glace
Mer de Glace

The Mer de Glace (Sea of Ice) is a glacier located on the northern slopes of the Mont Blanc massif, in the Alps. At 7 kilometres (4.3 mi) long and 200 metres (660 ft) deep, it is the longest glacier in France.[1]

Contents

Geography

Mer de Glace

It originates at an elevation of 2,400 metres (7,900 ft) where it is fed by the confluence of Glacier du Géant, Glacier de Lechaud, and Cascade du Talèfre, north of Mont Tacul, and descends to 1,400 metres (4,600 ft). It flows north-north-west between Aiguille du Moine on the east and Trélaporte on the west. Le Grand Dru lies to the north east. It was once easily visible from Chamonix, but has been shrinking and is now barely visible from below.[2]

It lies in the Chamonix valley, it was the first place in the valley to have a ready-made tourist attraction.

The Mer de Glace, like all glaciers, it is constantly renewed under the effect of two phenomena: accumulation, notably due to snowfall and ablation, essentially due to melting. The Mer de Glace flows permanently under the effect of its own weight, crusting crevasses, seracs or pockets of water to form, depending on the type of ground.

The glacier's speed, although not perceptible to the naked eye, is considerable. From more than 120 metres (390 ft) a year in its upper part, the Mer de Glace moves about 90 metres (300 ft) per year in the region of Montenvers, which is about one centimeter per hour.[citation needed]

As soon as the tensions intensify, the glacier is deformed and crevasses appear. These are notably transversal. When there is intense crevasse activity, the breaking-up of the glacier by the crevasses forms blocks of seracs.

The unidentified objects, of variable depth, depending on their positioning, may reach fifty metres. They always form in the same place because of the shape of the glacial valley in which the glacier flows. Disappearing downstream, they are renewed upstream.

History

John Tyndall explored the glacial tributaries feeding Mer de Glace in 1857

In the 18th and 19th centuries the glacier descended all the way down to the hamlet of Les Bois,[2] where it was known as Glacier des Bois. At that time the river Arveyron emerged from the glacier under a grotto-like vault (grotte d'Arveyron)[3] and attracted painters and later photographers, for example Joseph Mallord William Turner's "Source of the Arveron in the Valley of Chamouni Savoy", 1816. The position of its front end fluctuated over the years but its maximum extent was in the mid-19th century.[2]

Electricity Generation

Subglacial waters from the Mer de Glace are used seasonally by EDF for the generation of hydroelectricity. Tunnels bored under the glacier collect water from the base of the glacier and channel it down to a hydropower plant in the valley. This water is then discharged into the Arveyron further downstream.[citation needed]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ La Mer de Glace - Chamonix Mont Blanc
  2. ^ a b c (Grove pages 121-122, "in 1820 ... sixty yards")
  3. ^ Tyndall page 38, "In former times the whole volume of the Arveiron escaped from beneath the ice at the end of the glacier, forming a fine arch at its place of issue."

References

External links

Coordinates: 45°54′58″N 6°56′14″E / 45.91611°N 6.93722°E / 45.91611; 6.93722


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • Mer de Glace — bei Chamonix Das Mer de Glace, zu Deutsch Eismeer, ist der größte Gletscher Frankreichs und der Mont Blanc Gruppe und der viertgrößte Gletscher der Alpen. Das Mer de Glace (bzw. das System der dazugehörenden Einzelgletscher) ist ca. 12 km lang… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Mer De Glace — 45°54′10″N 6°56′40″E / 45.90278, 6.94444 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Mer de glace — 45°54′10″N 6°56′40″E / 45.90278, 6.94444 …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Mer de Glace — Mer de glace …   Wikipedia Español

  • Mer de glace — (spr. Mehr d glas), so v.w. Eismeer, s.u. Chamouny 2) …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Mer de Glace — (spr. mǟr dö gläß , »Eismeer«), Gletscher an der Nordseite der Montblancgruppe, setzt sich aus drei Armen zusammen, dem Glacier du Géant (oder du Tacul), der unmittelbar östlich vom Montblanc entspringt, dem kürzern Glacier du Lechaud, der seinen …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Mer de Glace — (spr. mähr dĕ glahß, d.h. Eismeer), Gletscher an der Nordseite des Montblanc, aus drei Armen bestehend, 42 qkm, 141/2 km lg., im Jardin 2787 m hoch …   Kleines Konversations-Lexikon

  • Mer de Glace —   [mɛrdə glas; französisch »Eismeer«], Gletscher an der französischen Nordseite des Montblanc, entsteht aus der Vereinigung der Glaciers du Géant, de Leschaux und du Talèfre, insgesamt 33 km2 groß, 12 km lang; endet steil als Glacier des Bois bei …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Mer de Glace —  Ne doit pas être confondu avec La Mer de glaces. Mer de Glace Vue sur la Mer de Glace. Latitude Lo …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Mer de Glace — Sp Mèr de Glãsas Ap Mer de Glace L led. Alpėse, R Prancūzija …   Pasaulio vietovardžiai. Internetinė duomenų bazė

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