The Kolka-Karmadon rock/ice slide of 20 September 2002: an extraordinary event of historical dimensions in North Ossetia, Russian Caucasus | Journal of Glaciology | Cambridge Core
A) Kolka glacier cirque after the disaster (photo by A. P. Polkvoi).... | Download Scientific Diagram
How Fast Can Glaciers Collapse? - The Atlantic
The Kolka-Karmadon rock/ice slide of 20 September 2002: an extraordinary event of historical dimensions in North Ossetia, Russian Caucasus | Journal of Glaciology | Cambridge Core
Collapse of the Kolka Glacier
How Fast Can Glaciers Collapse? - The Atlantic
Kolka Glacier | 10 Things You Didn't Know About…
PDF] Catastrophic detachment and high-velocity long-runout flow of Kolka Glacier, Caucasus Mountains, Russia in 2002 | Semantic Scholar
The September 2002 Kolka Glacier Catastrophe in North Ossetia, Russian Federation: Evidence and Analysis
Memorial Monument To those Killed during the Collapse of the Kolka Glacier. Karmadon Gorge Stock Image - Image of karmadon, alania: 153607367
Caucasus ice-rock avalanche in Russian Republic of North Ossetia | GRID-Arendal
The Kolka-Karmadon rock/ice slide of 20 September 2002: an extraordinary event of historical dimensions in North Ossetia, Russian Caucasus | Journal of Glaciology | Cambridge Core
Giant, Deadly Ice Slide Baffles Researchers - Scientific American
Collapse of the Kolka Glacier
Sliding glaciers 'a new threat' as global warming melts ice | The Independent | The Independent