On August 4, 1985, Dig Tsho, a lake in the Mt. Everest region of
Nepal, burst out, spilling an estimated 200 to 350 million cubic
feet of icy water. The resulting flood wave, an astonishing 35 to
50 feet high, barreled down the valley for roughly 55 miles.
Altogether, a $1.5 million hydropower installation, 14 bridges,
and various trails and patches of cultivated land were destroyed.
Such damages hit people in mountainous developing countries like
Nepal especially hard. No land is available on the steep valley
flanks for affected families to relocate to, and the destroyed
infrastructure might have been the first step toward increasing
the area's low standard of living. As is typical of many glacier
floods, the outburst of Dig Tsho was triggered by an ice avalanche
that crashed into the lake from an adjacent glacier. The resulting
impact wave traveled to the moraine dam, overtopped it, and led to
erosion of the dam, which finally broke.