Retreat of Tropical Glaciers Foreshadows Changing Climate’s Effect on Global Ice

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As they are in many places around the globe, glaciers perched high in the Andes Mountains are shrinking.

As they are in many places around the globe, glaciers perched high in the Andes Mountains are shrinking. Now, researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and their collaborators have uncovered evidence that the high-altitude tropical ice fields are likely smaller than they’ve been at any time since the last ice age ended 11,700 years ago.

That would make the tropical Andes the first region in the world known to pass that threshold as a result of the steadily warming global climate. It also makes them possible harbingers of what’s to come for glaciers globally.

“We think these are the canary in the coal mine. The tropics would probably be the first place you’d expect ice to disappear, and that’s what we’re seeing,” says Shaun Marcott, a professor of geoscience at UW–Madison. Marcott guided the research with colleagues at Boston College and Tulane University. Andrew Gorin, a former Boston College graduate student who is now at University of California, Berkeley, led the study, which appears in the Aug. 2, 2024, issue of the journal Science.

Glaciers grow slowly over time in regions where summer weather isn’t warm enough to melt all of the previous winter’s snowfall. Over time, unmelted snow collects and gets compacted and begins to move under its own weight, resulting in the year-round ice that defines a glacier.

Read more at University of Wisconsin-Madison

Photo Credit: ThierryBEUVE via Pixabay