A warming climate has claimed three more glaciers in Washington state. All three were on Mount Rainier, which is home to more ice than any U.S. mountain south of Alaska.

Scientists with the National Park Service say that Stevens Glacier was gone as of 2021.

Glaciologist Mauri Pelto looked at satellite imagery from last fall and says that he found that two other glaciers had dwindled down to ice patches, too small to be considered glaciers anymore.

“As we continue to have these warm summers and these heat waves, all the glaciers are going to really suffer, and any glacier that’s not in pretty good form is going to be lost," Pelto says.

Park service researchers say Rainier has lost half its ice since the start of the 20th Century. The losses have accelerated in recent years.

Pelto also notes that it’s too late to save the Northwest’s smaller glaciers, given the warming already baked into the climate by human pollution. But he says it’s not too late to slow global warming enough to save the Northwest’s bigger glaciers.

–Emphasis added–

Submission comment: I believe scientists error on the side of optimism for many reasons, and I believe one of those reasons is because environmental systems are so complex, even the most informed are ignorant of the true consequences the globe will experience thanks to the massive influence of humanity.

When we experience “accelerating losses” and it is already “too late” to save resources we depend on for survival, I think it is wishful thinking that even bold actions could prevent the loss of the bigger glaciers.

  • Goodtoknow
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    2 years ago

    Yes if we really cared, we’d create an immediate transition plan away from cars to public transit, emphasizing a more local community level economies that encourages far less consumerism. Along with fossel fuel ships and planes.

    • Rhaedas@kbin.social
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      3
      ·
      2 years ago

      We would have to radically change the very nature of our societies and how an individual lives. Such actions would ironically bring their own negative effects as the climate reacted. We’re in a Catch-22 as far as what we should and shouldn’t do, but the reality is that we’re so deeply invested in consumption that nothing will really change until production is affected. It’s already too late, but by then it will really be too late.