
One of Earth's most stable glaciers is on the verge of COLLAPSING: Perito Moreno Glacier has retreated by 800 metres - and could soon disappear altogether
But the 18-mile-long Perito Moreno glacier in Argentina is on the verge of total collapse due to climate change.
German scientists reveal that it is quickly getting both thinner and shorter – leading to an alarming reduction in its overall mass.
And it could soon disappear altogether within our lifetime, possibly a matter of decades from now.
Study author Moritz Koch, a PhD student at Friedrich-Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, said climate change has 'already destroyed one of the most spectacular natural phenomena on Earth'.
'Climate change, especially warmer temperatures have triggered the evolution we can observe today,' he told the Daily Mail.
Glaciers are slow-moving rivers of ice – some hundreds of thousands of years old – that reflect the sun's rays back into space and store valuable freshwater.
If they all completely melted, global sea levels would suddenly rise, flooding cities, displacing millions of people and destroying infrastructure.
Satellite imagery reveals the retreating Perito Moreno glacier between March 2020 and March 2025
Declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1981, Perito Moreno is a major Argentinian tourist destination due to its size and accessibility.
It has has 'long been considered stable despite widespread regional glacier retreat', according to Koch and colleagues.
To assess its 'current state and future fate', the team analysed satellite data and surveyed the glacier using a special radar system hung from a helicopter.
The ground-penetrating radar apparatus, which looks like an oversized Meccano toy, can scan through the ice to work out its dimensions.
This resulted in a map of the previously unknown glacier bed and allowed the team to analyze the decades-long development of the ice masses.
According to the findings, from 2000 to 2019, Perito Moreno lost about 13.3 inches (34cm) of thickness per year, melting relatively slowly.
But after that, this shrinkage accelerated dramatically to about 16 times the previous rate, reaching 18ft to 21ft (5.5 to 6.5 metres) per year from 2019 to 2024.
Every 12 months, the ice thickness decreased by the height of a house. But Perito Moreno is not only getting thinner, it is also getting shorter.
In some areas the glacier had retreated by more than 2,600 feet (800 metres) since 2019.
'It is also retreating (losing area), especially towards its northern margin, where we can observe a retreat of more than 800 metres,' Koch told the Daily Mail.
'The retreat rate of the glacier margin is quite heterogenous [not uniform] owing to the difference in lake depth.'
Results also revealed the presence of a large rocky ridge beneath the glacier's terminus – which the glacier is currently grounded on – that may have been responsible for its stability before 2019.
The authors caution that if the glacier's current thinning rate persists, it will detach from the rocky ridge and rapidly retreat even more, although it is not yet clear when this might happen.
At the moment, the glacier divides Lago Argentino, the largest freshwater lake in the entire country.
But as the ice cover becomes thinner and lighter, the water of Lago Argentino gives the glacier more buoyancy. This buoyancy causes more ice to break off from the glacier terminus or 'tongue', further accelerating the retreat.
The study, published in the journal Nature Communications Earth and Environment, warns that the glacier 'may well be on the verge of collapse'.
Perito Moreno may now be following a similar pattern of other retreating calving glaciers in Patagonia, the geographical region at the southern end of South America.
'The glacier is undergoing its most substantial retreat in the past century as of the writing of this paper,' the team conclude.
The study follows the creation of a ' Global Glacier Casualty List ', which documents glaciers that are soon to disappear, or have already melted away.
Its creators warn that over three-quarters of global glacier mass is expected to disappear under present climate policies.
Global sea levels could rise as much as 10ft (3 metres) if the Thwaites Glacier in West Antarctica collapses.
Sea level rises threaten cities from Shanghai to London, to low-lying swathes of Florida or Bangladesh, and to entire nations such as the Maldives.
In the UK, for instance, a rise of 6.7ft (2 metres) or more may cause areas such as Hull, Peterborough, Portsmouth and parts of east London and the Thames Estuary at risk of becoming submerged.
The collapse of the glacier, which could begin with decades, could also submerge major cities such as New York and Sydney.
Parts of New Orleans, Houston and Miami in the south on the US would also be particularly hard hit.
A 2014 study looked by the union of concerned scientists looked at 52 sea level indicators in communities across the US.
It found tidal flooding will dramatically increase in many East and Gulf Coast locations, based on a conservative estimate of predicted sea level increases based on current data.
The results showed that most of these communities will experience a steep increase in the number and severity of tidal flooding events over the coming decades.
By 2030, more than half of the 52 communities studied are projected to experience, on average, at least 24 tidal floods per year in exposed areas, assuming moderate sea level rise projections. Twenty of these communities could see a tripling or more in tidal flooding events.
The mid-Atlantic coast is expected to see some of the greatest increases in flood frequency. Places such as Annapolis, Maryland and Washington, DC can expect more than 150 tidal floods a year, and several locations in New Jersey could see 80 tidal floods or more.
In the UK, a two metre (6.5 ft) rise by 2040 would see large parts of Kent almost completely submerged, according to the results of a paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Science in November 2016.
Areas on the south coast like Portsmouth, as well as Cambridge and Peterborough would also be heavily affected.
Cities and towns around the Humber estuary, such as Hull, Scunthorpe and Grimsby would also experience intense flooding.
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