Accelerating Icelandic Glacier Melt in Past 25 Years

Frontiers in Earth Science, November 26
Over the past 130 years, glaciers in Iceland have lost about 20 percent of their total ice (540 gigatons of ice mass). Nearly half of this glacier loss has occurred in the past 25 years. Most projections (in other studies of Iceland’s glaciers) indicate accelerating loss as temperatures rise, and near-total loss of Iceland’s glaciers at 2°C of global warming or above.

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.523646/full

Compiled by Amy Imdieke.
Pam Pearson

Recent Posts

Record Low Snow in Hindu Kush Himalaya Threatens Water Supply

ICIMOD, April 24, 2026 2026 marks the fourth consecutive year of below-average snow conditions in…

3 dagar ago

Global Warming Weakens AMOC While Temporarily Strengthening Nordic Overturning Circulation

Ocean Science, 20 Apr 2026 Global warming and increased freshwater input from melting ice are…

3 dagar ago

Lack of Monitoring for Glacier Biodiversity: A Critical Gap in EU Policy

Science, 23 Apr 2026 Specially-adapted species living in glacier regions face rapid snowpack and ice…

3 dagar ago

Tides and Ocean Layering Shape Ice Shelf Melt, Impacting Antarctic Sea-Level Rise Projections

Science Advances, 24 Apr 2026 Observations from the grounding zone beneath the Ross Ice Shelf…

3 dagar ago

COP30 Video of the Week: Forecast-Based Financing and Adaptation in the Hindu Kush Himalaya

The Hindu Kush Himalaya faces rising climate extremes that threaten mountain communities, demanding a shift…

3 dagar ago

Without Emissions Cuts, A Real Risk of Extreme Sea-level Rise by 2100

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 23 April 2026 Observations suggest we are currently tracking…

3 veckor ago