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Pics show Ben Nevis snow caves so big they will last until winter

REMARKABLE new images show summer snow caves clinging to the slopes of the UK’s highest mountain.

The breathtaking structures on Ben Nevis – some of them 70 metres (230ft) in length – are likely to survive until this winter’s snows arrive.

They have been preserved as a result of an unusual combination of low summer temperatures and winds that blew snow into sheltered gullies on the 4,409ft peak.

The breathtaking structures are expected to last until winter
The breathtaking structures are expected to last until winter (Pic: Iain Cameron)

 

Climbers recently revealed stunning pictures of snow caves in the Cairngorm mountains to the south.

But the Ben Nevis snow caves are bigger, at higher altitude, and deeper, making them unlikely to disappear before the mountain is once again gripped by winter.

The snow caves cling to the slopes of Ben Nevis (Pic: A. Todd)

 

One patch recorded by researcher Iain Cameron included several meters of snow left over from 2014 meaning there could soon be three years of snow layers on the site soon.

“It was pretty impressive stuff,” said Mr Cameron, a snow patch researcher based in Stirling, who took the pictures last weekend (August 21-23).

“There was more than we expected to see. There was a huge quantity of it.

Iain Cameron described it as “pretty impressive stuff” (Pic: Blair Fyffe)

 

“Some of it was 15 metres deep (50ft). The photographs didn’t really do it justice, it was quite hard to take in.”

Mr Cameron and three friends were about 1,200 metres (3,940ft) above sea level on the side of Ben Nevis when they came across a stunning snow tunnel.

This snow tunnel is 1,200m above sea level (Pic: Blair Fyffe)

 

The structures are created when the snow begins to melt. As water begins to flow underneath a tunnel of air forms, melting the snow from underneath.

The results are magical – vast caverns, in this case so big the whole group could walk underneath it together.

The experienced experts donned head torches to ventured inside the tunnel and were amazed to emerge on the other side 70 metres away from the entrance.

The structures are created when the snow begins to melt (Pic: Iain Cameron)

 

“It was pretty scary and dark and wet,” Mr Cameron explained. “We had head torches on – it was a 70 metre long tunnel of snow. It was absolutely incredible.

“We had no idea if we would get the to one end from the other.”

He added: “It was amazing to walk through a 70 metre snow patch in August.”

Speaking about the deep snow patches the group came across he said: “It’s looking very likely it is going to last till 2016.”

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