Iceland review - 2019, Side 24

Iceland review - 2019, Side 24
20 Iceland Review It’s easy to understand how people become infatuated with glaciers. These mystical white giants lie sprawling over Iceland’s highest mountains, their sublime beauty inspiring admiration and awe. Very few, however, dare to undergo the dangerous task of travelling across them. For those dedicated enough, there is the Iceland Glaciological Society. Every spring, the group goes on an expedition to research Iceland’s glaciers. More than a year after I first requested to tag along, I finally get my chance to climb aboard a massive jeep with experienced glacier researchers, drive at a snail’s pace over icy crevasse zones, jump between icebergs on the Grímsvötn lakes, and gaze out at the frozen top of Grímsfjall mountain. “Vatnajökull glacier has shrunk quickly over the past 25 years,” says Magnús Tumi Guðmundsson, profes- sor of geophysics at the University of Iceland. “In the past 130 years, almost all of the glacier’s edges have receded, and it’s only sped up in recent years. More and more glacial lagoons are appearing where the glacier is retreating from valleys it has dug over the course of centuries. The lagoons cause even more melting, and the glaciers recede at an even faster pace.” Magnús Tumi heads the Glaciological Society, which counts both scientists and passionate lay- persons as its members. The organisation has been conducting annual research trips to the glacier since the middle of last century. This year, however, big changes are afoot. The glacier has receded so far that the route over Tungnaárjökull they’ve taken every year since 1953 is no longer passable. Where once there was a solid sheet of ice, lies a plain of muddy sludge, impenetrable for most vehicles. Instead, the group has to drive up Skálafellsjökull, considerably farther away from Reykjavík, and a much longer route over the dangerous glacier to their destination. Grímsfjall mountain rises from the Vatnajökull plateau. The sharply steep north side of the moun- tain stretches down into the Grímsvötn lakes, most of which are covered by a thick sheet of ice. Here and there, geothermal heat has melted the ice off the water – the lakes sit atop an active volcano. In the past few decades, the volcano has erupted regularly, caus- ing glacial melting, showers of ash, and glacial runoff floods all the way down to the sea. At the top of Grímsfjall, a stone’s throw from the volcano, the Iceland Glaciological Society has built three huts. They are our destination. We pile into our fleet of vehicles: three super jeeps, a snowcat, and several snowmobiles. They all follow the same GPS- guided route. Visibility is limited, making the danger- ous journey even riskier. As we arrive, the cold wind and lack of visibility only bolster the group’s spirits. The annual trip is always meticulously planned, with its goals determined clearly in advance. Of course, measurements, research, and equipment monitoring in multiple locations across the glacier require long hours. “It’s no holiday,” says Magnús Tumi, though I see some of his company crack a smile as we carry luggage and provisions into the largest hut. Due to great demand, this year’s trip is split in two so more people can participate. (Vehicles and hut sizes limit the number of people who can work on Grímsfjall at a time.) The Iceland Glaciological Society has between 500-600 members. “They’re people of all ages, professional geologists as well as glacier
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