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Rapid Swiss glacier ice loss after weak winter snowfall

Rapid Swiss glacier ice loss after weak winter snowfall

The Advertiser02-08-2025
Switzerland's glaciers are melting at an alarming pace, with scientists warning the seasonal loss of ice cover began weeks earlier than usual due to a snow-poor winter.
Glacier Loss Day - marked every year by researchers in Switzerland - represents the point when a glacier has melted away all the snow and ice it gained during the winter.
Depending on the glacier, it has arrived as early as late June or early July this year.
"In some regions in north-eastern Switzerland, we've never had such a small amount of snow on the glaciers at the end of winter," researcher Andreas Bauder of ETH Zurich said of the mountain conditions going into the northern summer months.
"As long as there is snow on the ground, the ice won't melt.
"But this year, the snowmelt began at the end of May and continued rapidly throughout June and into July."
In Switzerland, snow and ice cover is measured in detail every spring and autumn on about 20 of the country's roughly 1400 glaciers.
Between 10 and 15 of those are also monitored during the summer.
These observations are used to determine the Glacier Loss Day.
Among Switzerland's largest glaciers are the Aletsch and Gorner glaciers.
Looking back to 2024, the summer began with much larger snow reserves than this year, according to Bauder.
Even so, glaciers still lost more mass in 2024 than they gained during the winter, leading them to shrink.
"In the past, Glacier Loss Day usually came at the end of August or early September but we haven't seen that in the past 20 years," Bauder said.
Due to climate change, Switzerland hasn't experienced a single year of glacier growth in more than two decades.
According to the glacier monitoring network Glamos, Switzerland's glacier volume has practically halved since 1950: from 92.3 to 46.5 cubic kilometres as of 2024.
One cubic kilometre is equivalent to an ice cube with 1000-metre sides, or put another way, a billion ice cubes, each one metre in size.
Even a cold August with snowfall at high altitudes is unlikely to change the outlook, Bauder said, because summer snow isn't as dense as winter snow and melts quickly.
"A glacier is like a viscous mass of honey on a sloped surface. It flows downward," he said.
"When there's not enough snow feeding it from above, too little flows down.
"The glacier tongue at the bottom can no longer sustain itself and recedes."
Switzerland's glaciers are melting at an alarming pace, with scientists warning the seasonal loss of ice cover began weeks earlier than usual due to a snow-poor winter.
Glacier Loss Day - marked every year by researchers in Switzerland - represents the point when a glacier has melted away all the snow and ice it gained during the winter.
Depending on the glacier, it has arrived as early as late June or early July this year.
"In some regions in north-eastern Switzerland, we've never had such a small amount of snow on the glaciers at the end of winter," researcher Andreas Bauder of ETH Zurich said of the mountain conditions going into the northern summer months.
"As long as there is snow on the ground, the ice won't melt.
"But this year, the snowmelt began at the end of May and continued rapidly throughout June and into July."
In Switzerland, snow and ice cover is measured in detail every spring and autumn on about 20 of the country's roughly 1400 glaciers.
Between 10 and 15 of those are also monitored during the summer.
These observations are used to determine the Glacier Loss Day.
Among Switzerland's largest glaciers are the Aletsch and Gorner glaciers.
Looking back to 2024, the summer began with much larger snow reserves than this year, according to Bauder.
Even so, glaciers still lost more mass in 2024 than they gained during the winter, leading them to shrink.
"In the past, Glacier Loss Day usually came at the end of August or early September but we haven't seen that in the past 20 years," Bauder said.
Due to climate change, Switzerland hasn't experienced a single year of glacier growth in more than two decades.
According to the glacier monitoring network Glamos, Switzerland's glacier volume has practically halved since 1950: from 92.3 to 46.5 cubic kilometres as of 2024.
One cubic kilometre is equivalent to an ice cube with 1000-metre sides, or put another way, a billion ice cubes, each one metre in size.
Even a cold August with snowfall at high altitudes is unlikely to change the outlook, Bauder said, because summer snow isn't as dense as winter snow and melts quickly.
"A glacier is like a viscous mass of honey on a sloped surface. It flows downward," he said.
"When there's not enough snow feeding it from above, too little flows down.
"The glacier tongue at the bottom can no longer sustain itself and recedes."
Switzerland's glaciers are melting at an alarming pace, with scientists warning the seasonal loss of ice cover began weeks earlier than usual due to a snow-poor winter.
Glacier Loss Day - marked every year by researchers in Switzerland - represents the point when a glacier has melted away all the snow and ice it gained during the winter.
Depending on the glacier, it has arrived as early as late June or early July this year.
"In some regions in north-eastern Switzerland, we've never had such a small amount of snow on the glaciers at the end of winter," researcher Andreas Bauder of ETH Zurich said of the mountain conditions going into the northern summer months.
"As long as there is snow on the ground, the ice won't melt.
"But this year, the snowmelt began at the end of May and continued rapidly throughout June and into July."
In Switzerland, snow and ice cover is measured in detail every spring and autumn on about 20 of the country's roughly 1400 glaciers.
Between 10 and 15 of those are also monitored during the summer.
These observations are used to determine the Glacier Loss Day.
Among Switzerland's largest glaciers are the Aletsch and Gorner glaciers.
Looking back to 2024, the summer began with much larger snow reserves than this year, according to Bauder.
Even so, glaciers still lost more mass in 2024 than they gained during the winter, leading them to shrink.
"In the past, Glacier Loss Day usually came at the end of August or early September but we haven't seen that in the past 20 years," Bauder said.
Due to climate change, Switzerland hasn't experienced a single year of glacier growth in more than two decades.
According to the glacier monitoring network Glamos, Switzerland's glacier volume has practically halved since 1950: from 92.3 to 46.5 cubic kilometres as of 2024.
One cubic kilometre is equivalent to an ice cube with 1000-metre sides, or put another way, a billion ice cubes, each one metre in size.
Even a cold August with snowfall at high altitudes is unlikely to change the outlook, Bauder said, because summer snow isn't as dense as winter snow and melts quickly.
"A glacier is like a viscous mass of honey on a sloped surface. It flows downward," he said.
"When there's not enough snow feeding it from above, too little flows down.
"The glacier tongue at the bottom can no longer sustain itself and recedes."
Switzerland's glaciers are melting at an alarming pace, with scientists warning the seasonal loss of ice cover began weeks earlier than usual due to a snow-poor winter.
Glacier Loss Day - marked every year by researchers in Switzerland - represents the point when a glacier has melted away all the snow and ice it gained during the winter.
Depending on the glacier, it has arrived as early as late June or early July this year.
"In some regions in north-eastern Switzerland, we've never had such a small amount of snow on the glaciers at the end of winter," researcher Andreas Bauder of ETH Zurich said of the mountain conditions going into the northern summer months.
"As long as there is snow on the ground, the ice won't melt.
"But this year, the snowmelt began at the end of May and continued rapidly throughout June and into July."
In Switzerland, snow and ice cover is measured in detail every spring and autumn on about 20 of the country's roughly 1400 glaciers.
Between 10 and 15 of those are also monitored during the summer.
These observations are used to determine the Glacier Loss Day.
Among Switzerland's largest glaciers are the Aletsch and Gorner glaciers.
Looking back to 2024, the summer began with much larger snow reserves than this year, according to Bauder.
Even so, glaciers still lost more mass in 2024 than they gained during the winter, leading them to shrink.
"In the past, Glacier Loss Day usually came at the end of August or early September but we haven't seen that in the past 20 years," Bauder said.
Due to climate change, Switzerland hasn't experienced a single year of glacier growth in more than two decades.
According to the glacier monitoring network Glamos, Switzerland's glacier volume has practically halved since 1950: from 92.3 to 46.5 cubic kilometres as of 2024.
One cubic kilometre is equivalent to an ice cube with 1000-metre sides, or put another way, a billion ice cubes, each one metre in size.
Even a cold August with snowfall at high altitudes is unlikely to change the outlook, Bauder said, because summer snow isn't as dense as winter snow and melts quickly.
"A glacier is like a viscous mass of honey on a sloped surface. It flows downward," he said.
"When there's not enough snow feeding it from above, too little flows down.
"The glacier tongue at the bottom can no longer sustain itself and recedes."
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Rapid Swiss glacier ice loss after weak winter snowfall
Rapid Swiss glacier ice loss after weak winter snowfall

The Advertiser

time02-08-2025

  • The Advertiser

Rapid Swiss glacier ice loss after weak winter snowfall

Switzerland's glaciers are melting at an alarming pace, with scientists warning the seasonal loss of ice cover began weeks earlier than usual due to a snow-poor winter. Glacier Loss Day - marked every year by researchers in Switzerland - represents the point when a glacier has melted away all the snow and ice it gained during the winter. Depending on the glacier, it has arrived as early as late June or early July this year. "In some regions in north-eastern Switzerland, we've never had such a small amount of snow on the glaciers at the end of winter," researcher Andreas Bauder of ETH Zurich said of the mountain conditions going into the northern summer months. "As long as there is snow on the ground, the ice won't melt. "But this year, the snowmelt began at the end of May and continued rapidly throughout June and into July." In Switzerland, snow and ice cover is measured in detail every spring and autumn on about 20 of the country's roughly 1400 glaciers. Between 10 and 15 of those are also monitored during the summer. These observations are used to determine the Glacier Loss Day. Among Switzerland's largest glaciers are the Aletsch and Gorner glaciers. Looking back to 2024, the summer began with much larger snow reserves than this year, according to Bauder. Even so, glaciers still lost more mass in 2024 than they gained during the winter, leading them to shrink. "In the past, Glacier Loss Day usually came at the end of August or early September but we haven't seen that in the past 20 years," Bauder said. Due to climate change, Switzerland hasn't experienced a single year of glacier growth in more than two decades. According to the glacier monitoring network Glamos, Switzerland's glacier volume has practically halved since 1950: from 92.3 to 46.5 cubic kilometres as of 2024. One cubic kilometre is equivalent to an ice cube with 1000-metre sides, or put another way, a billion ice cubes, each one metre in size. Even a cold August with snowfall at high altitudes is unlikely to change the outlook, Bauder said, because summer snow isn't as dense as winter snow and melts quickly. "A glacier is like a viscous mass of honey on a sloped surface. It flows downward," he said. "When there's not enough snow feeding it from above, too little flows down. "The glacier tongue at the bottom can no longer sustain itself and recedes." Switzerland's glaciers are melting at an alarming pace, with scientists warning the seasonal loss of ice cover began weeks earlier than usual due to a snow-poor winter. Glacier Loss Day - marked every year by researchers in Switzerland - represents the point when a glacier has melted away all the snow and ice it gained during the winter. Depending on the glacier, it has arrived as early as late June or early July this year. "In some regions in north-eastern Switzerland, we've never had such a small amount of snow on the glaciers at the end of winter," researcher Andreas Bauder of ETH Zurich said of the mountain conditions going into the northern summer months. "As long as there is snow on the ground, the ice won't melt. "But this year, the snowmelt began at the end of May and continued rapidly throughout June and into July." In Switzerland, snow and ice cover is measured in detail every spring and autumn on about 20 of the country's roughly 1400 glaciers. Between 10 and 15 of those are also monitored during the summer. These observations are used to determine the Glacier Loss Day. Among Switzerland's largest glaciers are the Aletsch and Gorner glaciers. Looking back to 2024, the summer began with much larger snow reserves than this year, according to Bauder. Even so, glaciers still lost more mass in 2024 than they gained during the winter, leading them to shrink. "In the past, Glacier Loss Day usually came at the end of August or early September but we haven't seen that in the past 20 years," Bauder said. Due to climate change, Switzerland hasn't experienced a single year of glacier growth in more than two decades. According to the glacier monitoring network Glamos, Switzerland's glacier volume has practically halved since 1950: from 92.3 to 46.5 cubic kilometres as of 2024. One cubic kilometre is equivalent to an ice cube with 1000-metre sides, or put another way, a billion ice cubes, each one metre in size. Even a cold August with snowfall at high altitudes is unlikely to change the outlook, Bauder said, because summer snow isn't as dense as winter snow and melts quickly. "A glacier is like a viscous mass of honey on a sloped surface. It flows downward," he said. "When there's not enough snow feeding it from above, too little flows down. "The glacier tongue at the bottom can no longer sustain itself and recedes." Switzerland's glaciers are melting at an alarming pace, with scientists warning the seasonal loss of ice cover began weeks earlier than usual due to a snow-poor winter. Glacier Loss Day - marked every year by researchers in Switzerland - represents the point when a glacier has melted away all the snow and ice it gained during the winter. Depending on the glacier, it has arrived as early as late June or early July this year. "In some regions in north-eastern Switzerland, we've never had such a small amount of snow on the glaciers at the end of winter," researcher Andreas Bauder of ETH Zurich said of the mountain conditions going into the northern summer months. "As long as there is snow on the ground, the ice won't melt. "But this year, the snowmelt began at the end of May and continued rapidly throughout June and into July." In Switzerland, snow and ice cover is measured in detail every spring and autumn on about 20 of the country's roughly 1400 glaciers. Between 10 and 15 of those are also monitored during the summer. These observations are used to determine the Glacier Loss Day. Among Switzerland's largest glaciers are the Aletsch and Gorner glaciers. Looking back to 2024, the summer began with much larger snow reserves than this year, according to Bauder. Even so, glaciers still lost more mass in 2024 than they gained during the winter, leading them to shrink. "In the past, Glacier Loss Day usually came at the end of August or early September but we haven't seen that in the past 20 years," Bauder said. Due to climate change, Switzerland hasn't experienced a single year of glacier growth in more than two decades. According to the glacier monitoring network Glamos, Switzerland's glacier volume has practically halved since 1950: from 92.3 to 46.5 cubic kilometres as of 2024. One cubic kilometre is equivalent to an ice cube with 1000-metre sides, or put another way, a billion ice cubes, each one metre in size. Even a cold August with snowfall at high altitudes is unlikely to change the outlook, Bauder said, because summer snow isn't as dense as winter snow and melts quickly. "A glacier is like a viscous mass of honey on a sloped surface. It flows downward," he said. "When there's not enough snow feeding it from above, too little flows down. "The glacier tongue at the bottom can no longer sustain itself and recedes." Switzerland's glaciers are melting at an alarming pace, with scientists warning the seasonal loss of ice cover began weeks earlier than usual due to a snow-poor winter. Glacier Loss Day - marked every year by researchers in Switzerland - represents the point when a glacier has melted away all the snow and ice it gained during the winter. Depending on the glacier, it has arrived as early as late June or early July this year. "In some regions in north-eastern Switzerland, we've never had such a small amount of snow on the glaciers at the end of winter," researcher Andreas Bauder of ETH Zurich said of the mountain conditions going into the northern summer months. "As long as there is snow on the ground, the ice won't melt. "But this year, the snowmelt began at the end of May and continued rapidly throughout June and into July." In Switzerland, snow and ice cover is measured in detail every spring and autumn on about 20 of the country's roughly 1400 glaciers. Between 10 and 15 of those are also monitored during the summer. These observations are used to determine the Glacier Loss Day. Among Switzerland's largest glaciers are the Aletsch and Gorner glaciers. Looking back to 2024, the summer began with much larger snow reserves than this year, according to Bauder. Even so, glaciers still lost more mass in 2024 than they gained during the winter, leading them to shrink. "In the past, Glacier Loss Day usually came at the end of August or early September but we haven't seen that in the past 20 years," Bauder said. Due to climate change, Switzerland hasn't experienced a single year of glacier growth in more than two decades. According to the glacier monitoring network Glamos, Switzerland's glacier volume has practically halved since 1950: from 92.3 to 46.5 cubic kilometres as of 2024. One cubic kilometre is equivalent to an ice cube with 1000-metre sides, or put another way, a billion ice cubes, each one metre in size. Even a cold August with snowfall at high altitudes is unlikely to change the outlook, Bauder said, because summer snow isn't as dense as winter snow and melts quickly. "A glacier is like a viscous mass of honey on a sloped surface. It flows downward," he said. "When there's not enough snow feeding it from above, too little flows down. "The glacier tongue at the bottom can no longer sustain itself and recedes."

Rapid Swiss glacier ice loss after weak winter snowfall
Rapid Swiss glacier ice loss after weak winter snowfall

West Australian

time02-08-2025

  • West Australian

Rapid Swiss glacier ice loss after weak winter snowfall

Switzerland's glaciers are melting at an alarming pace, with scientists warning the seasonal loss of ice cover began weeks earlier than usual due to a snow-poor winter. Glacier Loss Day - marked every year by researchers in Switzerland - represents the point when a glacier has melted away all the snow and ice it gained during the winter. Depending on the glacier, it has arrived as early as late June or early July this year. "In some regions in north-eastern Switzerland, we've never had such a small amount of snow on the glaciers at the end of winter," researcher Andreas Bauder of ETH Zurich said of the mountain conditions going into the northern summer months. "As long as there is snow on the ground, the ice won't melt. "But this year, the snowmelt began at the end of May and continued rapidly throughout June and into July." In Switzerland, snow and ice cover are measured in detail every spring and autumn on about 20 of the country's roughly 1400 glaciers. Between 10 and 15 of those are also monitored during the summer. These observations are used to determine the Glacier Loss Day. Among Switzerland's largest glaciers are the Aletsch and Gorner glaciers. Looking back to 2024, the summer began with much larger snow reserves than this year, according to Bauder. Even so, glaciers still lost more mass in 2024 than they gained during the winter.

Revolutionizing Women's Health: The MenstruAI Device
Revolutionizing Women's Health: The MenstruAI Device

Herald Sun

time02-06-2025

  • Herald Sun

Revolutionizing Women's Health: The MenstruAI Device

1/6 Researchers have developed a promising new detection device using something most would consider to be a waste product, hopefully bridging the gap between affordable diagnostic practices and women all around the world. When it comes to our health, we're lucky to be living in a time of ever-increasing research and innovation, with each discovery, study, and trial bringing mankind one step closer to eradicating and treating all kinds of life-threatening illnesses. But much like our approach to technology, the more advanced our knowledge and application of medicine has become, the faster we demand answers and information. Now, a new device developed by researchers at ETH Zurich is set to change the face of women's health forever, efficiently detecting health biomarkers using only menstrual blood and sanitary napkins . 2/6 The device, known as MenstruAI, is set to be a simple, non-invasive and affordable diagnostic alternative for women, and has been designed to seamlessly record health data in everyday life. Unlike existing diagnostic methods, which can be time-consuming, uncomfortable and expensive, MenstruAI requires a person to simply place an integrated non-electronic sensor inside a sanitary pad and wear it as usual. Once it's time to change the pad, users need to take a picture of the used sanitary pad with their smartphone, where they will be able to analyse the result on the device's corresponding app. 3/6 Most diagnostic health tests conducted today analyse biomarkers found in blood or urine, among other bodily fluids. Until now, menstrual blood has not been considered to be anything other than a waste product with no diagnostic benefit, despite being produced by roughly half of the population. But unlike regular blood, which primarily consists of plasma and blood cells, menstrual fluid contains a complex mixture of uterine tissue, cervical mucus and blood. Containing hundreds of proteins, many of which can be indicators of numerous diseases such as endometriosis and ovarian cancer, menstrual blood carries more information about women's health than most may think. 4/6 'To date, menstrual blood has been regarded as waste. We are showing that it is a valuable source of information,' says Lucas Dosnon, doctoral student and researcher involved in the development of ETH Zurich's revolutionary new device. 'We are showing that it is a valuable source of information. Courageous projects [like this one] are called for to break down existing patterns of behaviour to ensure that women's health finally takes the place it deserves.' Much like a rapid antigen COVID-19 test, the device is a simple, paper-based diagnostic platform that can detect and quantify the target substance in a liquid sample. The results of the device's preliminary testing and trial stage, as well as commentary by the study's lead authors and researchers, have been published in the journal Advanced Science . 5/6 When designing the diagnostic device, researchers focused on three specific women's health biomarkers: C-reactive protein (CRP), an indicator of infection and inflammation; CA-125, a marker associated with endometriosis; and CEA, a marker associated with gynecological cancers. When these specific biomarkers in the menstrual blood come into contact the the test strip located in the wearable device, a coloured indicator appears, with its intensity dependent on the concentration of the biomarker. The results can be seen with the naked eye or can be further analysed through the smartphone-compatible app. 'The app also recognises subtle differences, such as the amount of proteins present, and makes the result objectively measurable,' Dosnon explains. 6/6 'Right from the outset, the aim was to develop a solution that can also be used in regions with poor healthcare provision and would be as cost-effective as possible, potentially enabling population-based screening,' says Inge Herrmann, PhD , corresponding author of the study and head of The Ingenuity Lab Zurich. 'MenstruAI can revolutionise women's health by offering a non-invasive, affordable, and accessible health monitoring method, democratizing healthcare, and enhancing service availability and equity.' While only in its initial testing phase now, researchers emphasise that even if the device is cleared for everyday use under real-life conditions, it is not designed to replace existing diagnostic tests. In other words, MenstruAI should be viewed more as an early warning system to alert women to potential health issues and should always be followed by a visit with a medical professional. More related stories Lifestyle Joining the travelling circus that is the Great Victorian Bike Ride is no walk in the park, but this traveller has no regrets. Read more Lifestyle Sydney airport is auctioning off a trove of forgotten treasures, with everything from laptops to teddy bears up for grabs. Read more

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