Posted on 09/13/2018 10:46:10 AM PDT by Oldeconomybuyer
In the summer of 1987, a woman visiting Alaska was crushed by a 1,000-pound chunk of ice. According to news reports at the time, Thais Grabenauer, 59, had been taking pictures with her husband at the foot of Exit Glacier, a towering wall of ice thats one of the most popular attractions in Kenai Fjords National Park. A half-ton piece of the glacier calved off as the couple was snapping, killing Grabenauer and injuring her husband.
It was one of those wrong place, wrong time tragedies that seem unlikely to happen again. But in the three decades since Grabenauers death, it has happened again - in Alaska and around the rest of the world. In 2009, for instance, two brothers crossed a safety barrier on New Zealands Fox Glacier and were buried under a collapsing ice shelf.
Deaths like these remain rare, but theyre also telling cases of a broader trend. In recent years, people have been increasingly flocking to the worlds glaciers. This boom in glacier tourism seems to be dually spurred, at least in part, by climate change: For one, people seem eager to glimpse the majestic monuments of ice before they melt away. And as ice sheets disappear, many glaciers are becoming more accessible - and unstable. T
Still, its likely that people visiting glaciers may not anticipate consequences quite as immediate as dislodged half-ton chunks of ice. The growing risks to travelers on melting glaciers are cruel reminders of all the smaller-scale and sometimes unpredictable damages climate change can inflicteven in the places where its broadest impacts are most visible.
(Excerpt) Read more at theatlantic.com ...
Facts are no longer allowed get in the way of the social justice agenda.
Before global warming, glaciers used to suck people in and freeze them.
And just think of the carbon footprint generated by their flights, cruises and bus rides to see the dying glaciers!
Glaciers will fall on you if you get too close. Keep your distance from glaciers as they are unstable, which is their nature.
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