A glacier on the Eastern Antarctic Peninsula has experienced the fastest recorded ice loss in modern history, according to a landmark study co-authored by Swansea University.
Published in Nature Geoscience, the research reveals that Hektoria Glacier lost nearly half its length—eight kilometers of ice—in just two months during 2023; a pace similar to the dramatic retreats seen at the end of the last ice age.
Led by the University of Colorado Boulder, an international team—including Swansea glaciologist, Professor Adrian Luckman—found that Hektoria’s retreat was boosted by the shape of the land beneath it.
Hektoria Glacier rested on an ice plain—a flat stretch of bedrock below sea level—which, once retreat began, saw large sections of ice break away in quick succession.

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