{"id":33529,"date":"2025-11-14T14:27:24","date_gmt":"2025-11-14T14:27:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/?p=33529"},"modified":"2025-11-14T14:27:24","modified_gmt":"2025-11-14T14:27:24","slug":"melting-glaciers-in-the-himalayas-feed-lakes-that-threaten-towns-below","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/?p=33529","title":{"rendered":"Melting Glaciers in the Himalayas Feed Lakes That Threaten Towns Below"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-byline svelte-w3rvbf\"> <span class=\"g-last-byline svelte-w3rvbf\">By Raymond Zhong, Jason Gulley and Bora Erden<\/span> <\/p>\n<p class=\"g-extended-bio svelte-1qfvypq\">Jason Gulley spent four weeks trekking through the Everest region to report and photograph this article, which was supported by the Pulitzer Center. Raymond Zhong reported from London. Bora Erden, in New York, visualized in 3-D the flood&#8217;s path into the village.<\/p>\n<p> Nov. 14, 2025  <\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">The ice of the Himalayas is wasting away. Glacier-draped slopes are going bare. The ground atop the mountain range, which sprawls across five Asian countries, is slumping and sliding as the ice beneath it \u2014 ice that held the land together \u2014 disappears. Meltwater is puddling in the valleys below, forming deep lakes.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">As humans warm the planet, so much ice has been erased from around Mount Everest that the elevation at base camp in Nepal, which sits on a melting glacier, has dropped more than 220 feet since the 1980s.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">But this loss is not unfolding gradually.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Often it begins slowly, imperceptibly \u2014 and then it happens all at once, with catastrophic consequences for the people below. That was how it went on a warm August day last year.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">By the time the water raged through, it was as if a swath of the village had never existed. The medical clinic, gone. The school, destroyed. Two dozen homes and trekking lodges, plus fields and fields of potatoes \u2014 wiped out.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-caption svelte-v3m00m\">As the flood charged through Thame, the headmaster of the village school fled to higher ground and captured this video.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-credit svelte-v3m00m\">Om Prasad Bhattarai<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Months later, a scientist named Scott Watson was walking the flood\u2019s path in reverse, up the steep valleys, up past mud-encrusted books in the ruined school, up to the unknown lake that had suddenly made itself very known.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">All across the fast-warming Himalayas, melting glaciers are creating thousands of high-altitude lakes \u2014 and, in effect, thousands of new opportunities for avalanches and earthquakes to cause destruction. When falling rocks or snow land on a frozen glacier, nothing much happens. But as the ice melts and forms a lake, those same falling objects can set off a flood that menaces villages, tourist lodges, hydropower plants and anything else in its path.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Dr. Watson, a glaciologist at the University of Leeds, and his team trekked through Thame as part of a three-week expedition in the Everest region to measure as many glacial lakes as they could using sonar and drones.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Sitting on these lakes in their inflatable kayak, the scientists found them anything but placid. The ice cliffs were leaking noisy streams of fresh meltwater. Rocks and debris were tumbling in. Behind heavy clouds, unseen landslides rumbled all around, like rolling thunder.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-caption svelte-v3m00m\">Scott Watson paddling a kayak fitted with a portable sonar system to map the depths of the glacial lake known as Dig Tsho.<\/p>\n<p><h2 class=\"g-subhed  svelte-wg034b\">A Dark Shape in the Valley<\/h2>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">The death of a glacier is widely understood to be a tragedy, a loss reversible only on geological time scales, mourned like the death of a species. But before a glacier is gone \u2014 while it is still in the process of dying \u2014 it represents not just a loss, but a threat.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">The problem is the meltwater. As a glacier shrinks, it sheds water that gathers in the earthen bowl where the ice once sat, forming a lake. But the dirt and rock around this bowl are loose, crumbly. And so maybe one day there is a landslide. Maybe a chunk of the glacier\u2019s remaining ice breaks off and plummets into the water.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">What happens next? Picture doing a cannonball into an aboveground swimming pool, said Daniel Shugar, an expert on glacial floods at the University of Calgary. Except you don\u2019t just make a giant splash; you blow out an entire wall of the pool. \u201cIt would drain within seconds,\u201d Dr. Shugar said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Water plunges down the valley, picking up speed but also sand, silt, gravel and boulders. It becomes a slurry so thick that it knocks down buildings.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">This is the way some of the largest floods in Earth\u2019s history, ancient deluges that reshaped entire landscapes, took place. More recent floods have taken their own staggering toll: In northern India in 2023, a chunk of partially frozen earth half a mile long collapsed into a lake, creating a 65-foot tsunami that barreled down the mountains, killing dozens of people and destroying a hydropower dam.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-caption svelte-v3m00m\">Potato fields in the village of Thame, which suffered heavy damage in last year\u2019s glacial lake flood.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">But it isn\u2019t just their capacity for devastation that makes these floods so terrifying. It\u2019s how hard it is to predict where, when and how they will happen.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">The lakes that flooded Thame (pronounced TAH-may) last year were small, not on anybody\u2019s list of the lakes most likely to cause a disaster.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">That day, the 32 students in the village\u2019s school were getting ready for lunch when the headmaster, Om Prasad Bhattarai, saw a dark shape charging down the valley. It was bristling, immense \u2014 as if a new, much larger river were swallowing up the old river from behind. Mr. Bhattarai told the children to drop everything and run.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">They made it to higher ground in time to watch the water slam into the building where they\u2019d been preparing to eat rice and lentil stew.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">The flood carved a long, curving gash through Thame that was 40 feet deep. Buildings kept collapsing into it for days after.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Milan Magar, a health assistant at Thame\u2019s clinic, had hiked to a nearby town that day to restock some medicine. After the flood, he took his usual route back, but at some point there was no more trail. He kept going, hoping to salvage something from the clinic. But soon he saw there was no more clinic, either. \u201cThere was nothing left,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">For days after, the schoolchildren told Mr. Bhattarai they were seeing the flood in their dreams.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-caption svelte-v3m00m\">The Tibet Guest House, a trekking lodge in Thame, was destroyed in the August 2024 flood; Om Prasad Bhattarai, headmaster of the school in Thame; damage to the school from the flood; and children attending classes in a temporary classroom in the village\u2019s community center.<\/p>\n<p><h2 class=\"g-subhed  svelte-wg034b\">Proliferating Threats<\/h2>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">When you think of a glacier, you probably imagine an expanse of white: stately, solid, pristine. Dr. Watson and his team crossed the face of Nepal\u2019s longest glacier, the Ngozumpa, and found it to be a river of dirt, boulders and milky-gray water.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Ice is still there, beneath the debris that crumbles off the mountains. But as it melts, more and more of the glacier\u2019s surface is liquid: puddles that you could step across at first, then ponds, then lakes. Now, the lakes are joining up, transforming the landscape into a maze of ribbonlike waterways.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Dr. Watson stood at the edge of one lake and steered a robot across its surface. A program on his phone showed the water\u2019s depth.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">\u201cFifty meters, the deepest I\u2019ve seen,\u201d he said. Then, five minutes later: \u201cI think we\u2019re up to 67 meters,\u201d or around 220 feet.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">In recent decades, satellites have allowed scientists to watch glacial lakes expand and proliferate in ever-increasing detail. There were 19,300 of these lakes across the Himalayas as of 2020, nearly 1,700 more than in 1990, by one recent estimate. Their total area grew 10 percent.<\/p>\n<p><h3 class=\"g-heading svelte-1jy2uw2\">Thousands of <span id=\"lakes-text\">glacial lakes<\/span> now dot the Himalayas<\/h3>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-credit svelte-v3m00m\">Sources: Survey of glacial lakes by Taigang Zhang, Weicai Wang and Baosheng An; roads and country borders from OpenStreetMaps; satellite image by Landsat and Copernicus.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">But to learn how deep the lakes are and how dangerous they could be, researchers still need measurements in the field.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Dr. Watson set out in May with a guide, three porters and two fellow researchers, Lauren Rawlins and Rajendra Kumar Shrestha. Among their 175 pounds of gear were the robot, the kayak, two sonar transducers, a GPS base station and a laser rangefinder. Plus, some modest luxuries: chocolate bars, Pepsi and Kendal mint cakes, the longtime confection of choice for British mountaineers.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">About a decade ago, while working on his doctorate, Dr. Watson measured glacial ponds in Nepal that were nearly 150 feet from the surface to the ice on which they sat. \u201cI thought that was deep,\u201d he said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">On this trip, he measured several that were deeper. Dig Tsho is a giant lake that shed much of its water in a catastrophic flood in 1985. (The village hit hardest? None other than Thame.) But the lake has since refilled, and this year Dr. Watson measured its maximum depth as 240 feet.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-caption svelte-v3m00m\">Dr. Watson setting up satellite-based surveying equipment near the Ngozumpa glacier; Dr. Watson leaping across a stream in the Khumbu region; piloting a robot boat on a meltwater lake atop the Ngozumpa Glacier; Dr. Rawlins catching a drone after an aerial survey near Imja Lake.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">It\u2019s no mystery why the lakes have grown so deep. As the sun rose at the Ngozumpa glacier, the bare faces of the ice began melting visibly, first in trickles, then in streams.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">The ice released rocks that rained down and landed in the lakes with loud kerplunks. Most of these rocks were the size of golf balls. But entombed in the ice behind them were boulders the size of desks, waiting to be freed.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Over three weeks in the region, Dr. Watson and his team trekked 130 miles and surveyed 26 lakes. Dr. Watson hopes the data will help officials and communities better comprehend the risks they face.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">But understanding lake growth tells scientists only where floods might begin. It doesn\u2019t tell them how much damage those floods could cause once they\u2019re underway.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">To make sense of that, Kristen Cook, a geomorphologist at Universit\u00e9 Grenoble Alpes in France, examines 3-D models of valleys before and after floods. The differences in topography indicate how much solid material \u2014 sand, gravel, boulders \u2014 the water picked up as it moved, adding to its deadly momentum.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">When Dr. Cook first ran the numbers on the 2023 flood in India, she thought her math was wrong. \u201cI was like, This can\u2019t be right,\u201d she said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">She and her colleagues\u2019 calculations showed that the volume of sediment that the flood carried down the valley was five times the volume of lake water that originally overflowed. In other words, the roaring torrent had a consistency somewhere between murky water and wet concrete.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-caption svelte-v3m00m\">The spillway of Imja Lake, which was built in 2016 and lowered the lake\u2019s level by 11 feet. The lake is still eating into the glaciers that feed it, causing it to grow longer. It is nearly two miles long, 2,000 feet wide and hundreds of feet deep.<\/p>\n<p><h2 class=\"g-subhed  svelte-wg034b\">\u2018We Don\u2019t Feel Peace\u2019<\/h2>\n<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Nobody died in the Thame flood. It occurred in the daytime; villagers saw and heard the water coming. This, everyone agrees, was an extraordinary stroke of luck.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">People near Nepal\u2019s border with China weren\u2019t so fortunate on an early morning in July, when a glacial lake in Tibet overflowed and killed at least 11 people. That lake had been a collection of ponds a few months earlier. It coalesced and grew to cover 150 acres before something caused it to burst.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">\u201cNobody knew these lakes were forming,\u201d said Sonam Futi Sherpa, an earth scientist at the University of Utah. That\u2019s a challenge not only for downstream communities, but for scientists, too: Satellites can have trouble detecting small lakes in high mountains, where the clouds are thick and the peaks cast big shadows, Dr. Sherpa said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">One way to reduce flood hazards is by making lakes somewhat smaller. A recent $36 million grant to Nepal from the United Nations\u2019 Green Climate Fund will go toward building drainage channels at four \u201chigh-risk\u201d lakes.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">It\u2019s a technique Nepal has used at two other lakes, Tsho Rolpa and Imja. The channel at Imja was built in 2016 and lowered the water level by 11 feet. But melting glaciers are still feeding the lake, causing it to grow longer, said Tenzing Chogyal Sherpa, a glacier scientist at the International Center for Integrated Mountain Development. Already, Imja is nearly two miles long, 2,000 feet wide and hundreds of feet deep.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">And smaller lakes nearby still pose threats. Nawang Doma Sherpa, 65, and her husband recently moved to Chukhung, a village two miles downstream of Imja, to raise yaks. (Many Sherpa people use the name of their ethnic group as their last name.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-caption svelte-v3m00m\">A yak grazing near the village of Chukhung; Nawang Doma Sherpa; yaks in Chukhung on a snowy June day; Mingma Rita Sherpa in Kathmandu, Nepal.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">One summer night last year, the two were in bed when they heard the rumble of rushing water.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Terrified, Ms. Sherpa shined a flashlight out the window. A neighbor was outside, watching floodwaters surge past their house. She couldn\u2019t sleep again until the terrible noise subsided.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">\u201cIn summertime, we don\u2019t feel peace,\u201d Ms. Sherpa said.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">People in Thame can relate. Mingma Rita Sherpa was born there. He was a student when the village first flooded in 1985, killing 12 people. Later, he became one of the first employees at Thame\u2019s hydropower plant. He was at work last year when the water tore through again, sweeping away his home, the lodge he owned and the land on which they stood.<\/p>\n<p class=\"g-text  svelte-wbgwfj\">Mr. Sherpa is now staying with his brother-in-law in Nepal\u2019s capital, Kathmandu, far from the ice and the peaks. He has no plans to return.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Raymond Zhong, Jason Gulley and Bora Erden Jason Gulley spent four weeks trekking through the Everest region to report and photograph this article, which was supported by the Pulitzer Center. Raymond Zhong reported from London. Bora Erden, in New York, visualized in 3-D the flood&#8217;s path into the village. Nov. 14, 2025 The ice<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":33530,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[50],"tags":[11532,9400,16509,18721,14630,773,3148],"class_list":{"0":"post-33529","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-environment","8":"tag-feed","9":"tag-glaciers","10":"tag-himalayas","11":"tag-lakes","12":"tag-melting","13":"tag-threaten","14":"tag-towns"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/33529","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=33529"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/33529\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/33530"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=33529"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=33529"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/naijaglobalnews.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=33529"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}