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Could artificial mini glaciers bring water to the driest, coldest places on Earth?

ice stupas
(Image credit: Nishant Tiku/University of Aberdeen, Author provided)

Glaciers are not just spectacular indicators of climate change as they shrink and disappear due to global warming. They are also, for many communities, an irreplaceable source of fresh water.

During the melting season in summer, a portion of mountain glacier surface releases water that is essential to the ecosystem in the valleys below, supplying vast cities – and industries – in places like South America and India.

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Matteo Spagnolo is a professor of Geography and the Environment in the School of Geosciences at the University of Aberdeen, U.K. Matteo studied Natural Sciences at the University of Pisa in Italy, obtained a master’s degree in GIS and Remote Sensing at the IAO, Italy, and completed a PhD in Geology, studying the interaction between tectonics and rivers, at the University of Genoa, Italy.