Surselva and the Geology of the Alps

Collisions and the drifting apart of continental plates have repeatedly reshaped the crust of the Earth.

They created mountains that eroded and disappeared, including those on the Eurasian continent. Once, there were higher mountains than today’s Alps on the continent. Millions of years later, there were oceans. They all disappeared over time.

When the African plate collided with the Eurasian plate about 35 to 20 million years ago, today’s Alps were formed. The African plate and the bottom of the primordial sea Tethys, situated between the two continental plates, were pushed over the Eurasian plate in a process that took millions of years. Nature has all the time and always leaves traces. Researchers are increasingly able to disclose this fascinating history.

The great variety, shapes, and structures of stones, rocks, fossils, and (marine) animal and plant life give an idea of the time the Earth took and has to become what it is today. It also shows that the Earth as a planet has no judgment on climate change and is constantly reinventing itself.

The Surselva (canton of Graubünden) is a region of unique geological features, a testament to the Earth’s rich and diverse history. Many types of rocks, each with its own story, can be found next to and on top of each other, offering a glimpse into the Earth’s past over millions of years.

The exhibition ‘Schichtwechsel – La Surselva’ in Ilanz is a huge collection of rocks and stones and a journey through time and space. It places them in a geological context, offering a unique educational experience and informing visitors about the Earth’s fascinating geological history.

The exhibition of about 200 stones, sometimes weighing several tonnes, is an installation of individual stones or groups of stones in various places. Each stone represents a specific species and a period in evolution.

The Museum Regiunal Surselva in Ilanz explains the different aspects of the theme and knowledge about the geology and tectonic features of the Surselva in more detail.

The City Hall of Fribourg and the Eternal Peace

France defeated the Eidgenossen of Swiss Confederates in Italy in 1515  (Marignano, near Milan).

The peace treaty was signed on 29 November 1516 in the hôtel de ville/Rathaus in bilingual Fribourg/Freiburg. The eternal Peace (la Paix éternelle, der ewige Friede) lasted until the French invasion in the year 1798.

The City Hall (Hôtel de Ville). The Eternal Peace lasted until 1798

The storm came a few years later: the Reformation. Fribourg remained Catholic and a dogmatic Catholic bastion but remained an ally of Protestant Bern until 1798.

The tulip and slow tourism in Morges

In 2016, the city of Morges (canton Vaud) started the process of becoming Switzerland’s first slow tourist destination.

Slow Tourism is a movement against the stress of daily life and hectic tourism, a way of travelling quietly to meet local populations and enjoy nature while adopting eco-responsible behaviour.

The city, the region, and nature on the shores of Lake Geneva are ideally suited to slow tourism. The Parc “de I’indépendance” symbolizes this bond between the city, nature, and tourism.

The tulip is a beautiful flower. The annual Tulip Festival welcomes many visitors. It is slow tourism par excellence. People walk, speak, and enjoy themselves without any haste and modern means of transport, although not without smartphones.

For the 50th edition of the Tulip Festival, the Association Morges Fleur du Léman commissioned 2020 a creative project in the public space. This mandate resulted in the sculpture by Leo Orta (1993), representing an almost five-metre-high tulip.

Parc de l’Indépendance

This sculpture offers the Festival a permanent residence in Independence Park and gives the city an eternal springtime, thus slowing tourism forever.

(Source and further information: www.morges-tourisme.ch)

Impressions of Morges

Le musée Forel

François-Alphonse Forel (1841-1912)