YOU don’t need a spaceship to see alien landscapes up close. Just take a hike in the South Tyrol in northern Italy, where fog and the glow of dawn help create an otherworldly spectacle.
These strange formations are called Erdpyramiden in German and Piramidi di terra in Italian, which both translate to earth pyramids. Their origins lie in the boulder-studded moraine clay deposited by glaciers during the last ice age. Torrential rain erodes exposed clay, while the rocks protect material directly beneath them. When the conditions are just right, over time the rocks “rise” out of the landscape.
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German photographer Kilian Schönberger describes them as “one of the strangest landscape elements of the Alps”. This example, near Plata in the Puster valley, is one of the most admired of several similar formations across the province. Other striking examples can be seen in the hills above the city of Bolzano.
Inevitably, such places inspire tales of petrified witches or cursed meadows. Other myths are more original. “For one of these areas there is a prophecy that doomsday arrives when the erosion reaches the stove of a nearby farm,” says Schönberger. The march of nature being what it is, it may be best to get along and see them soon.
Photographer
Kilian Schönberger
This article appeared in print under the headline “Alien world of the Alps”
