Icefall
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Most glacier ice flows at speeds of a few hundred meters per year or less. However, the flow of ice in an icefall may reach thousands of meters per year. Such rapid flow cannot be accommodated by plastic deformation of the ice. Instead, the ice fractures forming crevasses. Intersecting fractures form ice columns or seracs. These processes are imperceptible for the most part, however, a serac may collapse or topple abruptly and without warning. This behavior often poses the biggest risk to mountaineers climbing in an icefall.
Below the icefall, the glacier bed flattens and/or widens and the ice flow slows. Crevasses close and the glacier surface becomes much smoother and easier to traverse.
Icefalls are climbed because of their beauty and the challenge they pose. In some cases, an icefall may provide the only feasible or the easiest route up one face of a mountain. An example is the Khumbu Icefall on the Nepalese side of Mount Everest, variously described as "treacherous" and "dangerous." It is about 5,500 metres (18,000 feet) above sea level.
[edit] References
- Post, Austin; Edward R. LaChapelle [1971] (May 2000). Glacier Ice, Revised edition, Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Press, pp. 18-21. ISBN 0-295-97910-0. pl:Lodospad
uk:Льодопад

