Melting glaciers changed the topography of a roughly 330-foot-long segment of the border between Italy and Switzerland.
Part of the border will shift because of the glacial melt, in another sign of how much humans are changing the world by ...
Global warming is causing all Alpine glaciers to recede, affecting natural boundaries and changing mountain routes.
The melting of glaciers in the Alps has forced Italy and Switzerland to redraw the border that runs between them in the ...
Parts of the 744km-long Swiss-Italian border have always followed the lines that nature has drawn. Now, climate change has ...
Despite 30 percent more snowfall last winter, Swiss glaciers couldn't avoid the effects of record summer heat and Saharan ...
Part of the border will shift because of the glacial melt, in another sign of how much humans are changing the world by ...
Italy and Switzerland have been forced to redraw their border in the Alps due to melting glaciers caused by climate change.
With Europe being the world’s fastest-warming continent, the impact of climate change is being felt most acutely in areas ...
Swizerland and Italy have redrawn part of their border as climate change is melting the glaciers that have historically ...
Fast-melting glaciers along the Matterhorn have led to Switzerland and Italy redrawing part of the border they share.
The two countries have agreed to change the border under the iconic Matterhorn Peak, one of the highest summits in the Alps.