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Glacial Erratics Trail

Informationen zur Route

Category
region
Difficulty
Leicht
Länge
Dauer
Aufstieg
Abstieg

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Description

Attentive observers will notice boulders in the meadows that do not match the local geology composed of limestone and marl rocks (sedimentary rocks). Among the boulders on Blattisturren, for example, one gets the feeling of being in the Grimsel area with its granites and gneisses (ancient rocks). This also caught the attention of our (geological) ancestors who called such boulders erratics (= misplaced stones). They are also known as glacial erratics or colloquially as Geissberger. But how did massive boulders from the Grimsel area get to Lungern?

About 20,000 years ago, during the maximum glaciation of the last ice age, an arm of the Aare Glacier flowed over the Brünig towards Lucerne far into the Swiss Plateau. The valley was at times covered by ice over 1700 m above sea level. The glacier carried debris on its back as well as larger rockfalls from its catchment. About 15,000 years ago, as the ice slowly melted and retreated over the Brünig during the warm period we still live in today, it left this sediment load as a souvenir. Some witnesses of the past cold period can still be admired today. Many have, however, been covered by natural processes such as rockfalls and mudflows or destroyed by human activities. Often the boulders were used as quarries for building due to their solid stone. Sometimes they had to give way to more efficient agricultural use. So let us enjoy the remaining geological witnesses.

Höhenprofil

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