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MOUNTAIN

Norwegians campaign to give Finland a mountain

A Facebook campaign has been launched for Norway to give their flat Finnish neighbour a mountain that would become its new highest peak as a gift for the centenary of its independence.

Norwegians campaign to give Finland a mountain
The Haldi mountain straddles the border of Finland and Norway. Photo: Ken Bartlett/Peakbagger.com
The campaign, “Halti as an anniversary gift” has won the support of the head of the Norwegian Mapping Authority, and been warmly received in Finland where one commentator claimed the gesture “would be remembered for a thousand years”. 
 
“The aim of the site is to see how many Norwegians are interested in giving Finland the peak of the Halti mountain, which is 20 metres within our borders, as an anniversary gift in 2017,” the campaigners wrote at the launch of campaign site on Facebook on December 8th. 
 
At 1,365m, Halti does not even make the the list of Norway’s highest 200 peaks. But even one of its lowly lower spurs, Hálditšohkka, is the highest point in Finland, at 1,324m. 
 
Simply adding a triangular addition to the border between Norway and Finland, by drawing a line 200m North and 150m to the East  would bring Finland a new highest peak, while losing Norway just 0.015 km2. 
 
“Isn’t it a creative idea?” Bjørn Geirr Harsson, the retired employee of the Norwegian Mapping Authority who dreamed up the proposal, told NRK when they contacted him this week. 
 
“We would not have to give away any part of Norway. It would  barely be noticeable. And I’m sure the Finns would greatly appreciate getting it,” he said. 
 
Harsson, 75, said he had the idea back in 1972 when he was flying along the border taking measurements. 
 
“I was taken aback by why on earth they had not received this peak,” he said. 
 
Although Harsson admitted to having had the idea, he said he did not use Facebook, and suspected his son had put up the page. 
 
On Thursday last week Harsson sent an email to Anne Cathrine Frøstrup, the head of the Norwegian Mapping Authority, his former employer, making the proposal. 
 
“I must say that I think it’s a very good idea,” she told NRK.”It is a nice gift to give to a country that lacks a high mountain, where the highest point isn’t even a peak,” she said. 
 
Finns commenting on the Facebook page have been overwhelmed with the gesture. 
 
“This would be the coolest thing ever!!!!” wrote Harri Nieminen from Tampere. 
 
“The Norwegians would make history and become heroes not just in Finland but in the whole world!” wrote Jyrki Veranen. 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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MOUNTAIN

Hochvogel: A famed mountain straddling Germany and Austria faces a rocky collapse

It is one of the most famous mountains in the Allgäu Alps - and it could soon be history. According to experts, the summit of the Hochvogel will soon collapse, and up to 260,000 cubic metres of rock could fall into the valley.

Hochvogel: A famed mountain straddling Germany and Austria faces a rocky collapse
The summit of Hochvogel. Photo: DPA

Yet the possible scenario is hardly shaking up the locals: According to the authorities, there is no particular threat to the population near the mountain.

For years now, a huge crevasse at the summit on the border between Bavaria and Tyrol has been growing in size, and the first rock falls have already occurred. Researchers use sensors to monitor the movement of the massif in order to be able to predict large rockfall.

SEE ALSO: Weekend Wanderlust: Reaching new heights in the Allgäu

The only building near the Hochvogel summit is the Prinz-Luitpold-Haus, an almost 140-year-old refuge of the German Alpine Club. But it is so far away that hardly anything can happen to it, says Andreas Kaenders of the Oberallgäu District Office.

There is no built-up area on the Austrian side, says Thomas Figl from the Tyrolean Landesgeologie association. “If there is the big rockfall, there will be a cloud of dust in the Hinterhornbach community depending on the wind, but the area is definitely not threatened,” he says.

The village is more than two kilometres as the crow flies from the mountain.

The rock movements at the Hochvogel are monitored by researchers. According to them, the crack at the summit is currently a good 40 metres long, 8 metres deep and 3 metres wide.

In the Zugspitze area as well as in two other regions in Austria and Italy, threatened mountain regions are also being monitored by drone flights and measurement technology.

It is unclear whether the Hochvogel summit will actually come to an end with a great deal of noise. “There have been smaller and larger events for years,” says state geologist Figl.

It is difficult to assess whether the rockfalls will continue piece by piece or whether the “big bang” will suddenly occur.

 
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