L’Alpe 18 : mountain fears

Translations : Cary Bartsch

Written for people looking for information with meaning, L’Alpe is the first review devoted to the many cultures and heritages of Alpine Europe. Its ambition is to provide information, language barriers not withstanding. As your guide, L’Alpe looks at the people who, from the meandering Danube to the Rhône, have adapted to an exceptional climate. A cross between a book and a magazine, it draws on the first to provide background documents on a main theme, supported by rigorous analysis, an insistence on quality and the notoriety of renown authors. From the second, it adopts a quarterly rhythm for regular contributions to current debates, rich illustrations, the insatiable curiosity of its journalists and a necessarily didactic approach. Though rigorous in its approach to knowledge, L’Alpe is not a scientific journal. It calls on the contributions of history, geography, archaeology, ethnology, etc. to shed light on the meaning of the traces left by man on the mountain environment. And it is also open to current debates on the future of the Alps and other mountains in the world.

Low-lying Alps
Geologically speaking, the history of the Alps is a continuous catastrophe. From the initial upward thrust to the final erosion, with in the meantime falling rocks, landslides, earthquakes, avalanches and floods, mountains live and die, ending as a plain after a few hundred million years.

The miraculous survivors of Bergemoletto
Buried under an avalanche, three women survived for over one month in the shattered remains of a stable. An incredible story that stirred imaginations in the 1700s and even today stands as a record of human survival.

Collision of continents
The Alps are on the move. At the joining point of two continental plates, they shiver from time to time, producing earthquakes that are occasionally destructive. Scientists and an array of measurement devices monitor the turbulence that is as unavoidable as it is unpredictable.

Shocking images
The press did not wait for Paris Match to come along before providing readers with spectacular images of the major events rocking the planet. Starting even before the end of the 1800s, Alpine catastrophes provided illustrators with rich material. A selection.

Heading in the wrong direction
Avoid all risk and danger in the mountains, that is the new leitmotif of developers and «  consumers  ». The desire to ensure safety at all costs is now making its effects felt in the Alps and in Alpine activities, where risk and accidents have become untenable prospects. An unfortunate overreaction with tremendous legal consequences that is in the process of fundamentally changing an entire aspect of Alpine culture.

The fault of de Saussure
He disappeared in a crevasse and the story could have ended there, during the summer of 1800, had a préfet, a guide, a journalist and a sculptor not decided to do something. In short, a surprising story in which mountains play a part along side politics and noble sentiment.

Tragedy on the Matterhorn
Four dead. That was the price to be paid for the conquest of the Matterhorn in 1865. Obsessed by the elegant pyramid, the Englishman Edward Whymper attempted the ascension several times before the final victory. A success and a tragedy that stand out in the history of alpinism.

Merciful mountains
Killers or benevolent entities ? Mountains cast long shadows or stand forth in the brilliant sunlight, depending on chance and our creative imaginations. On the one hand, the enduring myth of mountains as man killers, on the other the image of the inviting slopes. A short (and exemplary) demonstration in the form of the portrait, rapidly sketched, of an exceptional guide.

A helping hand for travellers (in distress)
Guardian angels have watched over the Alpine passes since men have travelled them. The ancient divinities made way for a handful of patron saints while hospices and shelters welcomed travellers. The perils of Alpine voyages produced a tradition of hospitality that has been maintained over the centuries.

Le Claps de Luc
A tremendous landslide in the 1400s forever modified this small area in the Drôme department in France. The picturesque landscape of Claps de Luc, where the disaster obliterated entire villages under water, is now highly appreciated by artists and tourists. The story of the life and death of an Alpine lake.

The phantom menace
Permafrost is not to be found exclusively in the Arctic. This soil, frozen year round, is present in a large part of the higher Alps as well. Its role in causing natural catastrophes is now well understood and, given the current changes in the global climate, may represent a formidable danger.

Death in the making
«  Glacier tragedy  » proclaimed Paris-Match at the end of the summer in 1965. On the worksite of a dam in Switzerland, eighty-eight workers died under tons of ice. A predictable accident. Capable of crashing down at any time, the lower edges of glaciers are now closely monitored.

The prediction
Even though the date 23 October 2006 (a Monday as everyone knows) is still fresh in memories, it remains difficult to explain precisely what happened that day. Not the facts, of course, nor the incalculable damage. The problem lies in the interpretation because the very few minds still capable of analysis are now in hiding. What is more, it is virtually impossible to obtain solid information on Jean Martinoux. His devotees have turned the real life of a relatively normal human being into a fantasy story made up of legends. A short story by Sylvain Jouty.

A city in the mountains
Are Alpine cities special ? Perhaps not. Though they are confronted with particular difficulties such as the topology, they are also increasingly obliged to deal with the mechanisms of a global economy. For the time being, the agenda is full steam ahead with periurbanisation and competition with the major European cities. As for the future, that is still up in the air, but major amounts of imagination will be required.

The Croisière Jaune
Some seventy years ago, a group of artists, mechanics, ethnologists, writers and engineers travelled from one end of Asia to the other by automobile. Everything would seem to have been already said about this remarkable adventure. It is nonetheless with great pleasure that one opens this handsome book published by Glénat. A fascinating and well documented account, complete with colour photographs, for the most part never published. Excerpts in Alps Abroad.

Powdered gold
Guigoz milk has been a staple for generations of babies. It was invented by an industrious man from the Valais. Having set up shop in Gruyère, Maurice Guigoz discovered how to transform the rich Alpine milk into powder and then made clever use of a new phenomenon called advertising.

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