10 Most Amazing Glaciers Outside Polar Regions
When fallen snow compresses for many years to form large masses of ice. They have the unique quality of moving. Some glaciers may also defined as slow-moving rivers of ice, while others are like fields or ice. Glaciers occupy about 10% of the total land area of the world, with the highest concentrations in the polar regions like the Canadian Arctic, Antarctica, Greenland, Alaska, etc., the largest one of them being the Lambert Glacier in East Antarctica . However, many stunning glaciers also lie in the non-polar regions of the world. Let us take a look at 10 Most Amazing Glaciers Outside Polar Regions.

5. Fox and Franz Josef Glacier

Fox and Franz Josef Glacier The Fox Glacier and the Franz Josef Glacier are located in the Westland Tai Poutini National Park of South Island, New Zealand. The Fox Glacier is 13km in length, while the Franz Josef Glacier is 12km, and the two glaciers, set 20km apart, together have the unique feature of descending from the Southern Alps to a temperate rainforest full of greenery and lushness, at a height of less than 300m.

4. Jostedalsbreen

Jostedalsbreen The Jostedalsbreen Glacier in the Sogn og Fjordane in Western Norway is the largest glacier in the continent of Europe. At a length of 60km, it is one of the world's longest glaciers outside polar regions. Maintained by high snowfall instead of temperature, it has high melting rates in the snouts. It has around 50 glacier arms. Branches of the stunning Jostedalsbreen reach down to into valleys.

3. Furtwängler Glacier

Furtwängler Glacier The Furtwängler Glacier is located near the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania, in the African Great Lakes region. The ephemeral glacier, existing since about 1650, is a small remnant of an ice cap that was once on top of the summit of the mountain, 85% of which disappeared between 1912 and 2011, and according to experts, "it is highly unlikely that any ice body will remain after 2060?.

2. Siachen Glacier

Siachen Glacier The Siachen Glacier, between India and Pakistan, is located in the Karakoram Range in the Himalayas, near their Line of Control. At a length of 76km, is the world's longest glacier in a non-polar region. Because of the extensive glaciation of the watershed near which the glacier lies, the portion is called the Third Pole. Both India and Pakistan claim sovereignty over the Siachen Glacier.

1. Fedchenko Glacier

Fedchenko Glacier The Fedchenko Glacier, one of the largest glaciers in the world, is in the Pamir Mountains of the mountainous country of Tajikistan in Central Asia. It is a narrow glacier, with the maximum thickness being 1000m, but has a length of 77km, making it the longest of the glaciers outside polar regions. The Fedchenko and its dozens of tributary glaciers together form an amazing glacial river system. There are several glaciers, be it in the polar regions or in other parts of the world. The glacial ice all over the world together forms the largest reservoir of fresh water. But, due to global warming, they are melting away, at a rapid rate. Man indiscriminately contributes to the rise in temperature, without realizing that this, in turn, melts the glaciers, which further creates a vicious cycle where the temperature goes even higher, increasing the water level of earth by several meters, disturbing the ecological balance and causing catastrophic natural disasters .


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