Classroom lesson 路 Mont Blanc馃嚝馃嚪 France

Mont Blanc

The 'White Mountain' - the tallest peak in the Alps

The snow-covered summit of Mont Blanc in the French Alps

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

Mont Blanc means 'white mountain' in French. It is the tallest mountain in the Alps - 4,809 metres high - and one of the most famous mountains in Europe. It sits right on the border between France and Italy, with views of both countries from the top.

Tell me more

Mont Blanc is covered in snow and ice all year round, even in summer. The thick layer of frozen water on top is called an ice cap. Long, slow-moving rivers of ice called glaciers creep down the sides of the mountain. The most famous one, the Mer de Glace ('Sea of Ice'), is around 7 kilometres long.

The mountain was first climbed in 1786 by two men from the French town of Chamonix. Before that, most people thought no one could ever reach the top - it was full of ice cracks and freezing winds. Today, around 20,000 people try to climb it each year, though it is still a serious challenge.

The town of Chamonix at the foot of Mont Blanc is one of the world's most famous places for mountain sports: hiking, climbing, skiing, snowboarding and paragliding. In the winter, it turns into a giant ski resort with snow so deep it can bury a small car.

The mountain is slowly changing. Because the world is getting warmer, the very top has actually been getting a little shorter each year, as the ice cap melts. Scientists measure it every two years to keep track. The 'White Mountain' is still bright white - but it has a few centimetres less snow on top than it used to.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01What do you think makes a mountain 'hard to climb' - height, weather, or something else?
  2. 02Glaciers are rivers of ice. How can ice flow like water if it moves so slowly we can't see it?
  3. 03Scientists measure Mont Blanc's height every two years. What can a mountain tell us about how the world is changing?
Try this

Classroom activity

Find the highest mountain in your country and the deepest part of your country (a valley or a coast). What is the height difference? Mark Mont Blanc on the same scale. How does your country compare?

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