piccole cose

small significant things in everyday life by giovanni, webdesigner and almost anthropologist on the alps in paris on the alps in versailles (changed home often, lately).

Love mountains? See you on my mountain-centered blog stile alpino

Ask  

Grab the feed RSS


Matterhorn | When Plates Collide (photo by unlimited inspirations)
There’s something amazing that has happened over millions of years. Continental plates first separated and then collided, launching up the Alps when plates overlapped each other. Though Matterhorn is a very amazing site to see out of all the mountains in the Alps, because of its pyramid shape (due to erosion) and the result of the Apulian Plate (part of the African Plate which broke off) and Eurasian Plate collision. The top of Matterhorn is composed of gneisses from the African continent, where the lower parts are full of sedimentary rock and greenschists from the oceanic crust of the ancient Piemont-Liguria Ocean that separated Laurasia and Gondwana during the mid-late Mesozoic Era.
Matterhorn is located at the border of Italy and Switzerland in the Pennine Alps. It is one of the tallest mountains in the Alps, surpassing 14,500 feet.

Matterhorn | When Plates Collide (photo by unlimited inspirations)

There’s something amazing that has happened over millions of years. Continental plates first separated and then collided, launching up the Alps when plates overlapped each other. Though Matterhorn is a very amazing site to see out of all the mountains in the Alps, because of its pyramid shape (due to erosion) and the result of the Apulian Plate (part of the African Plate which broke off) and Eurasian Plate collision. The top of Matterhorn is composed of gneisses from the African continent, where the lower parts are full of sedimentary rock and greenschists from the oceanic crust of the ancient Piemont-Liguria Ocean that separated Laurasia and Gondwana during the mid-late Mesozoic Era.

Matterhorn is located at the border of Italy and Switzerland in the Pennine Alps. It is one of the tallest mountains in the Alps, surpassing 14,500 feet.

(Source: geologise, via geologyrocks)

Little men crossing over big crevasses. Glacier du Triolet (Mont Blanc)
Photo taken by me

Little men crossing over big crevasses. Glacier du Triolet (Mont Blanc)

Photo taken by me

Ghiacciaio del Triolet - Monte Bianco / Mont Blanc
Photo taken by me

Ghiacciaio del Triolet - Monte Bianco / Mont Blanc

Photo taken by me

Piz Cancian: leaving the glacier

Piz Cancian: leaving the glacier

Rifugio Grassi al passo del Camisolo, photo by me

Rifugio Grassi al passo del Camisolo, photo by me

Freney Pillar- Mont Blanc.
Brividi.
[via alpine exposures]

Freney Pillar- Mont Blanc.

Brividi.

[via alpine exposures]