Upsala Glacier

Upsala Glacier as seen from the International Space Station, October 2009. Click here for photo notes.

The Upsala Glacier is a large valley glacier in Argentina's Los Glaciares National Park. It flows from the Southern Patagonian Ice Field, feeding the nearby Perito Moreno Glacier. The glacier terminus is at Lago Argentino. The Upsala Glacier is well known for its rapid retreat,[1] which many see as evidence for global warming.[2]

The name comes from the old spelling with one p of Uppsala University, which sponsored the first glaciological studies in the area. The University is located in Uppsala, Sweden.[3]

The glacier showed almost continual recession up until 1999. The acceleration in ice motion during the two decades preceding 1999 may have been augmented by the release of backstress when the glacier retreated beyond the islands in Brazo Upsala.[4] Another period of even faster retreat started in 2008.[5]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Upsala glacier.

External links

References

  1. "Glaciar Upsala en el año 1928" Greenpeace Argentina
  2. "Un glaciar patagónico se redujo 13,4 km2 en los últimos 7 años" - Clarín
  3. Peru For Less- Destinations- Argentina- Calafate- Perito Moreno Glacier, Upsala Glacier, el Torre Glacier, and El Chalten
  4. Skvarca, Pedro; Raup, Bruce; De Angelis, Hernán (2003). "Recent behaviour of Glaciar Upsala, a fast-flowing calving glacier in Lago Argentino, southern Patagonia" (PDF). Annals of Glaciology (International Glaciological Society) 36 (1): 184–188. doi:10.3189/172756403781816202.
  5. Sakakibara, Daiki; Sugiyama, Shin; Sawagaki, Takanobu; Marinsek, Sebastián; Skvarca, Pedro (2013). "Rapid retreat, acceleration and thinning of Glaciar Upsala, Southern Patagonia Icefield, initiated in 2008". Annals of Glaciology 54 (63): 131–138. doi:10.3189/2013AoG63A236.

Coordinates: 49°53′13″S 73°16′21″W / 49.88694°S 73.27250°W / -49.88694; -73.27250


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