
According to report, Glacial melting had revealed a boot and crampon and other remains that were later identified as belonging to the German climber.
Police
from Valais canton said in a statement: “DNA analysis enabled the
identification of a mountain climber who had been missing since 1986.”
The
remains of a German mountain climber who disappeared while crossing a glacier
near the Matterhorn Mountain nearly 40 years ago have been discovered in
melting ice.
Two
climbers found the remains on 12 July while hiking along the Theodul Glacier in
Zermatt, Valais, southern Switzerland, police said on Thursday.
“In
September 1986, a German climber, who was 38 at the time, had been reported
missing after not returning from a hike.”
The police
did not provide additional information on the climber’s identity or the
circumstances of his death. They published a picture of the discovery site,
showing a single hiking boot with red laces sticking out of the snow.
Forensic
analysis was carried out on the remains at Valais hospital in the town of Sion,
and experts linked them to the climber’s disappearance in 1986, police said.
At least
300 people have gone missing in the Alps in the last century, according to some
estimates. The bodies of some people who disappeared have been discovered as
glaciers shrink due to the climate crisis.
Nine years
ago, the remains of two Austrian soldiers who died during the first world war
were found in the Italian Alps near the small ski resort town of Peio.
Last year,
experts recorded the worst melt rate on Switzerland’s glaciers since records
began more than a century ago. The glaciers lost 6% of their remaining volume,
nearly double the previous record in 2003.
Swiss
glaciers lost half their volume between 1931 and 2016, and a further 12%
between 2016 and 2021, according to a study published in 2022.
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