Venezuela’s Last Glacier Melts Away Grim Milestone in the Fight Against Climate Change
In a stark symbol of climate change's impact, Venezuela has become the first nation to lose all its glaciers, marking a somber milestone in the battle against global warming. Once boasting six glaciers spanning 1,000 square kilometers in 1910, the country now stands devoid of these icy formations, reduced to mere remnants unable to meet glacier classification criteria.
The Humboldt glacier, or La Corona, nestled in the Sierra Nevada National Park, was the last to resist the thawing trend. Yet, its decline has been precipitous, with the once sprawling 4.5 square kilometer expanse reduced to less than 0.02 square kilometers, falling far short of the minimum size for glacier status.
Professor Julio Cesar Centeno of the University of the Andes (ULA) lamented, "In Venezuela, glaciers no l...