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CAUGHT IN THE ICE

TRAGEDY IN FRANCE. (By Telegraph—Press Assn.—Copyright.) (Australian and N.Z. Cable Association.) PARIS, August 20. (Received August 21, 11.20 p.m.) Three tourists were buried alive in thousands of tons of ice at St. Pierre, Dalbigny, in the Department of Savoie, through the collapse of an ice grotto, which was one of the sights of the district. The cave was situated in a ravine in which the snow from the surrounding heights of the alpine foothills is frozen during the winter into enormous masses of ice, which does not thaw even in the hottest summer. A party of thirteen entered the cave when the roof collapsed. A woman and two men were entombed behind the ice wall many feet thick. One body has been recovered and the ice is being dynamited to release the others.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ST19230822.2.31

Bibliographic details

Southland Times, Issue 19025, 22 August 1923, Page 5

Word Count
137

CAUGHT IN THE ICE Southland Times, Issue 19025, 22 August 1923, Page 5

CAUGHT IN THE ICE Southland Times, Issue 19025, 22 August 1923, Page 5