Climate Change Accelerates Melting of Italy’s

 Italy’s Ventina glacier, one of the biggest in northern Lomba



rdy, has melted so much due to climate change that geologists can no longer measure it the way they have for the past 130 years.


After this year’s hot summer, geologists discovered that the simple stakes used as benchmarks to measure the glacier’s retraction each year are


now buried under rockslides and debris that have made the terrain too unsteady for future in-person visits.


The Lombardy Glaciological Service said Monday that it will now use drone imagery and remote sensing to kee


p track of the ongoing shrinkage on the glacier, which is located near Sondrio, in the same general area of northeast Lombardy that is hosting some 2026 Winter Olympics events.


An overview of the Ventina glacier, near Sondrio, northern Italy in 1985. (Lombardy Glaciology Service via AP)


Geologists say that the Ventina glacier has already lost 1.7 ki


lometers (1 mile) in length since the first measuring benchmarks were positioned at the front of the glacier in 1895.


The melting has accelerated in recent years, with the glacier losing 431 meters (471 yards) in the last 10 years, n


early half of that since 2021, the service said. It’s another example of how accelerating global warming is melting an


d shrinking Europe’s glaciers, causing a host of environmental and other impacts.


Watch More Image Part 2 >>>

“While we could still hope until the 1980s that there would be normal cycles (of retraction) or at least a containe


d retraction, in the last 40 years something truly striking has occurred,” s


aid Andrea Toffaletti, a member of the Lombardy Glaciological Service.


Italy’s mountain glaciers, which are found throughout the Alps and Dolomites in the north and along th


e central Apennines, have been receding for years, thanks to inadequate snowfall in the winter and record-setting hot summer


. Glaciers always melt some in summer, with the runoff fueling mountain streams and rivers.


But the hot summers are “no longer able to guarantee the survival of the winter snowpack” that keeps the glacier intact, Toffaletti said.


“In order to regenerate and remain in balance, a certain amount of residual snow from the winter must remain on


the glacier’s surface at the end of the summer. And this is happening less and less frequently,” said Toffaletti.


According to the Lombardy service, the Alps represent a climate hotspot, recording double the global average of temperature increases since pre-industrial times, resulting in the loss of over 64% of the volume of Alpine glaciers.

Đăng nhận xét

Mới hơn Cũ hơn

Support me!!! Thanks you!

Join our Team