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Even I was a little surprised.
Granted, I grew up in a wired world and had logged on at airports, libraries and hotels. I'd even pilfered cyber signals in the Nevada desert. But I never expected to come across an Internet cafe at nearly 15,000 feet in Nepal's Everest region.
The vision was more perplexing than the four-armed form of Shiva, but there it was: the "world's highest internet cafe." Fellow trekkers sipped lattes and updated their Facebook status. Outside the door was the glimmering peak of iconic Ama Dablam.
My travel companions were floored.
It was understandable. Both were longtime veterans of the region, also known as the Khumbu. Leo Le Bon was a rugged 72-year-old who led the first commercial trek there in the late 1960s. My other companion, Jeff Greenwald, was a travel writer who'd written about the region in the early 1980s. Our trip would mark Leo's 40th anniversary return to the Khumbu region, and the founding of his famed company,...
Martin Hölzle has crossed glaciers the world over; in the Arctic, the Rocky Mountains, New Zealand and in the Andes. "I've almost lost count how many," he says.
Yet he says that every time he's back on the ice, he is gripped by the same fascination he felt as a 12-year-old boy when, wandering through a frozen landscape for the very first time, he told his parents, "I want to study glaciers!"
Today Hölzle is 48, a professor of glaciology and a go aboard member of the World Glacier Monitoring Service. "Have a look how much ice there still is under the rubble of that moraine down there," he calls to three fellow researchers.
Hölzle glances up the flanks of the valley at a dome of ice that doesn't have the large crevasses typically found on glaciers in the Alps. "This one flows really, really slowly" he says, rocking his head from side to side. "That's typical for cold glaciers."
He relishes precious moments like these at an altitude of 4,000 meters (13,000 feet) above sea level in Kyrgyzstan's Tian Shan Mountains, which also straddle neighboring China and Kazakhstan. "This attraction," he murmurs reverently, and then adds: "But I want to know how this dreamboat works."
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In its icy glacier kingdom, tiny snow flea sits atop food chain munching algae
His face is tanned the color of leather, except for light patches under his sunglasses. He calls himself a glacial biologist. Takeuchi gathered ice from the glacier surface in clean plastic bags. Later, he would dry the bags to measure the earthy
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Gone wild: Brillion woman's excursion to Tanzania proved to be adventure of a ... A lot of people don't know that there is a glacier on top (of the mountain), but there is. I took a lot (of photographs) of the glacier. I had never been that close to a glacier. I took a lot of pictures of the porters. To me, they are the hardest |
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Police Log: 300 Jr. High Kids Converge Downtown, Pervert Invitation, Unruly Rumpus Just who that male was, or how or why he was associated with Berkeley and deserved a sunglasses-and-hoody-wearing protest, remains a mystery. 11:30am – A neighbor of Hidden Valley Elementary School on Glacier Drive phoned police to explain that an |