(After image) Ice collapses and the avalanches they can trigger are one of the gravest
dangers that glaciers present. In the late evening of September 20, 2002, a
rock-and-ice avalanche began on a peak high above the village of Karmadon in
the Russian Caucasus. The avalanche fell onto the tongue of the Kolka glacier,
shearing it off and triggering a massive landslide containing tens of millions
of cubic yards of rock, mud, and ice. This rushed down the valley at speeds of
over 60 miles per hour, burying the lower parts of Karmadon (center of images)
and killing more than 120 people. The "before" image was taken on July 22,
2001, and the "after" image on September 27, 2002, a week following the
disaster. By this date, lakes (visible in the center left of the landslide and
in the lower right of the image) had begun to form as the landslide blocked
rivers. Close to 10 million cubic yards in volume, these lakes posed a danger
of outburst and catastrophic downstream flooding.