Pyrenean glaciers Aneto / Monte Perdido
Among Europe's southernmost glaciers, the shrinking ice fields of Aneto and Monte Perdido offer a visceral encounter with a disappearing world at the roof of the Pyrenees.
About this spectacle
Standing at the roof of the Pyrenees, visitors to the Aneto and Monte Perdido massifs witness something increasingly rare: the remnants of ancient glacial ice clinging to high-altitude cirques and rocky walls. The Aneto glacier, draped below Spain's highest peak, presents a stark landscape of crevassed ice, moraine debris, and meltwater streams cutting through grey rock. Monte Perdido's terraced glaciers, framed by sheer limestone walls in the Ordesa canyon system, cast a cold blue-white light even on bright summer days. The silence at altitude is profound — wind, distant meltwater trickle, and the occasional crack of ice shifting. Wildflowers press close to glacier margins in summer, and the view across layered ridgelines into France is sweeping. These are among the southernmost glaciers in Europe, visibly retreating year by year, making each visit a witness to geological change in real time.
When to go
Jun — Sep, peak Jul — Aug
Getting there
Nearest airport: ZAZ. Nearest city: Huesca.
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