Sub glacial waters from the Mer de Glace are used seasonally by EDF for the generation of hydroelectricity.
They appear to have been the first recorded travellers for pleasure in the region, scaling Montenvers with the aid of local guides and giving the name of "Mer de Glace" to the glacier they subsequently examined.
Boulogne-sur-Mer | Cagnes-sur-Mer | La Seyne-sur-Mer | Dives-sur-Mer | Colleville-sur-Mer | Villefranche-sur-Mer | Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer | Glace Bay, Nova Scotia | Fos-sur-Mer | Courseulles-sur-Mer | Banyuls-sur-Mer | Trouville-sur-Mer | Saint-Mandrier-sur-Mer | Isigny-sur-Mer | Bernières-sur-Mer | Octeville-sur-Mer | Mer | Luc-sur-Mer | Le Verdon-sur-Mer | Canal de Caen à la Mer | Argelès-sur-Mer | Villers-sur-Mer | Varengeville-sur-Mer | Tracy-sur-Mer | Sanary-sur-Mer | Saint-Cyr-sur-Mer | Poème de l'amour et de la mer | Mer de Glace | Hautot-sur-Mer | Glace Bay |
Another attraction was the "Chalet or Swiss Cottage" from the window of which the visitor could look at real waterfalls, against the background of the Mer de Glace and Mont Blanc, as painted by Mr Danson.
Malouf also collaborated with Meale on his second operatic project, Mer de glace (1986–91), a tableaux-like juxtaposition of some ideas of the novel Frankenstein alongside the real dealings of Mary Shelley with Shelley and Byron.