The White War—a snow-bound World War I battle between Italy and Austria—claimed the lives of countless soldiers way up in the Alps. Now, melting ice is revealing frozen soldiers, some of them perfectly preserved—but not Captain America-preserved—for nearly a century.
The clash lasted four years, beginning in 1915, in makeshift tunnels and trenches at a staggering 12,000 feet above sea level—the highest fight in history.
An Austrian rifle found melting out of the ice. Photo: Museo della Grande Guerra, Peio.
Apparently artifacts began flowing down from the mountains a few decades ago; the Telegraph reports that these even included still-legible, never-sent love letters and poetry. But it's the mummified people—80, so far—that are proving the most wrenching.
The mummified remains of three Hapsburg soldiers found in 2004. Photo: Museo della Grande Guerra, Peio.
While temperatures and avalanches were the most common cause of death, claiming souls in the thousands, nature wasn't the only killer. Last year, two teenage soldiers were interred in Peio, an Alpine village on the frontline that didn't evacuate during the conflict—both had bullet holes in their skulls. Ultimately all of the finds go to a forensic anthropologist; though he's able to extract DNA, there often isn't enough contextual info about the family's current whereabouts to make the proper identifications and announcements.
So now we have bacteria coming back from the permafrost and frozen soldiers. Next: zombie Nazi soldiers kept immortal by Jurassic viruses.
Lead image: The remains of two Austrian soldiers found on the Presena Glacier in 2012. Photo: Office for Archaeological Finds, Autonomous Province of Trento