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Scientists thought this Argentine glacier was stable

New data shows Perito Moreno Glacier’s rapid retreat, revealing climate change’s delayed impact on this iconic mass of ice. An iconic Argentinian glacier,...

Times of Suriname

long thought one of the few on Earth to be relatively stable, is now undergoing its “most substantial retreat in the past century”, according to new research. The Perito Moreno Glacier in the Southern Patagonian Ice Field for decades has been wedged securely in a valley. But it's started losing contact with the bedrock below, causing it to shed more ice as it inches backwards.

It's a change, illustrated in dramatic time-lapse photos since 2020, that highlights “the fragile balance of one of the most well-known glaciers worldwide," write the authors of the study in the journal Communications Earth & Environment. They expect it to retreat several more kilometres in the next few years. “We believe that the retreat that we are seeing now, and why it is so extreme in terms of values that we can observe, is because it hasn’t been climatically stable for a while now, for over a decade,” said Moritz Koch, a doctoral student at the Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg and one of the study authors.

“Now we see this very delayed response to climate change as it is slowly but surely detaching from this physical pinning point in the central part of the glacier.” Koch and his team did extensive field work to get the data for their calculations. To measure ice thickness, they flew over the glacier in a helicopter with a radar device suspended beneath. They also used sonar on the lake and satellite information from above.

Every year, hundreds of thousands of people visit Glaciar Perito Moreno, which was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1981. It's a site known to “calve” ice chunks that fall into Lake Argentino below. The basic physics of climate change and glaciers is intuitive: heat melts ice, and global warming means more and faster glacial melting, said Richard Alley, an ice scientist at Pennsylvania State University who was not involved in the study. But much like a dropped coffee mug, it's harder to predict when and exactly how they're going to break apart. (Euronews)

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