New Research Shows That World's Mountain Glaciers Are Shrinking
Boston, MA (May 30, 2001) -- Mountain glaciers around the
world are receding, say geophysicists presenting research
at the annual spring meeting of the American Geophysical Union
(AGU). In a finding he calls "dramatic," Dr. Rick
Wessels from the United States Geologic Survey (USGS) presented
research that compared new satellite data to historical records
and photographs of glaciers on mountains worldwide, showing
that the majority of glaciers studied have decreased in size.
Wessels is part of the Global Land Ice Measurement from Space
(GLIMS) project at USGS, which is using NASA's Advanced Spaceborne
Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) to monitor
mountain glaciers around the world. ASTER is one of the instruments
on the TERRA satellite, which launched in December 1999.
Using ASTER data from the last year, and comparing it to
historical glacier data, Wessels says his team was able to
get preliminary results that show some significant reduction
in glacier size over the past decade. For example, Wessels
showed images of glaciers in the Andes Mountains in South
America, which have decreased by almost a kilometer in the
past 13 years, and a glacier in Columbia, which the team is
watching closely because it is losing meters of ice each week.
Wessels says the team has also seen glaciers shrinking in
the Pyrenees Mountains in France and Spain, as well as in
the Swiss Alps.
Wessels says they cannot tell why the glaciers are receding,
but does say that mountain glaciers respond much more quickly
than polar glaciers to changes in temperature and climate.
Wessels also added that a few glaciers studied did actually
increase in size, although he said these were primarily limited
to mountains in Scandinavia.
In addition to glacier size, Wessels and his colleagues are
also using the high resolution images from ASTER to look at
crevasses and even small bodies of water on the surface of
glaciers - giving scientists a better picture of the overall
"health" of a particular glacial region.
One of the areas where the GLIMS team is focusing research
on the size and temperature of glacial lakes in the Tibetan
Himalayas, including the Khumbu glacier on Mt. Everest - which
makes up part of the most popular route that climbers use
when attempting to reach the world's highest peak.
Wessels says that eventually they will be able to monitor
the status of every glacier in the world, and will be able
to create a long-term assessment of glacier hazards.
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For more information:
American Geophysical Union
Spring Meeting
Boston, MA
May 29 - June 2, 2001
Press Room: (617) 954-3138
Rory McGee
Inside Science News Service
(301) 209-3088
GLIMS web site
ASTER web site
Images from
ASTER
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