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DNA tests confirm the body found on a Swiss glacier is of a German mountaineer missing since 1986

The peak of the Matterhorn is pictured during sunrise, Tuesday, July 14, 2015. (Dominic Steinmann/Keystone via AP) The peak of the Matterhorn is pictured during sunrise, Tuesday, July 14, 2015. (Dominic Steinmann/Keystone via AP)
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GENEVA -

DNA tests have confirmed that the body recently found on a glacier southeast of the famed Matterhorn peak is that of a German mountaineer who disappeared 37 years ago, police in southwestern Switzerland said Thursday.

Increasing glacier melt, which many scientists blame on global warming, has spurred a recent increase in discoveries of the remains of hikers, skiers and other Alpinists who went missing decades ago.

Regional police said the 38-year-old German went missing in September 1986 and that searches at the time did not find him.

On July 12, mountaineers on the Theodul glacier near the Italian border found the remains of the man, which were then transported to a nearby hospital for analysis. Genetic tests confirmed the man's identity, which was not made public by the regional police.

Swiss climatologists and other experts say the country's glaciers have been melting at accelerated rates in recent years, attributing it in part to climate change caused by human activity.

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