The New Zealand Herald

Glaciers’ ‘astonishin­g loss’

NZ’s icy giants have shrunk by one third over four decades

- Jamie Morton environmen­t

New Zealand’s glaciers have shrunk in area by one third over the past four decades — an astonishin­g loss scientists have partly attributed to climate change.

The new figures come as a glaciologi­st has warned an abnormally hot summer could mean trouble for the South Island’s icy giants.

Dr Sabine Baumann, of the Technical University of Munich, Germany, recently completed the first complete stocktake of New Zealand’s glacier cover since Dr Trevor Chinn made an aerial survey in 1978.

The work drew on remote sensing technology, along with field work that helped distinguis­h the glaciers’ physical area size.

Her results, reported to the American Geophysica­l Union, revealed how the total glacier area had shrunk from 1240 sq km to 857 sq km — a decrease of 31 per cent since the late 1970s, or just under 1 per cent of loss each year.

The number of glaciers also fell slightly from 3283 to 3180, while mean altitude climbed from 1859m to 1939m above sea level.

Those figures followed a 2014 analysis by Chinn and other scientists which showed ice volume in the Southern Alps had shrunk by 18.4cu km or 34 per cent since the 1970s, and ice losses had been accelerati­ng rapidly since the turn of the new century.

Victoria University glaciologi­st Dr Brian Anderson said glaciers responded to climate of a variety of timescales — anywhere between a few years and centuries.

“So most of the glaciers are still retreating because of warming during the 20th century, and particular­ly since 2007,” he said.

“But some of our most responsive glaciers are actually advancing, likely a response to slightly positive mass balances measured from 2013 to 2015.”

Franz Josef Glacier, after retreating 1.43km between 2008 and December 2016, had advanced around 50m.

“That’s still tiny compared to the amount that’s been lost, but at least it now appears to be going in the right direction.”

However, a La Nina-flavoured summer bringing consistent­ly hot weather and warm sea surface temperatur­es in the Tasman Sea could have significan­t impacts.

 ?? Pictures: Getty Images, Google Maps / Herald graphic ??
Pictures: Getty Images, Google Maps / Herald graphic

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