More Volcanic Eruptions, Study Suggests. Now, All Eyes Are On Antarctica [View all]
New research from the Chilean Patagonia has identified a link between glacial retreat and underground volcanic activity
Christian Thorsberg - Correspondent
July 9, 2025 1:47 p.m.

Chile's Mocho-Choshuenco volcano, as seen from the air in June 2019 Dropus via Wikipedia Commons under CC BY-SA 4.0
Since the new millennium, the worlds glaciers have shed 5 percent of their collective mass, a loss with significant impacts on both global and regional scales.
When glaciers melt, sea levels rise, avalanches and landslides are more likely to occur, and long-term freshwater access is thrown into question.
Now, a new study adds an additionaland explosiveconsequence to the list of changes: melting glaciers are likely to make volcanic eruptions more frequent and severe.
Quick fact: Proximity of volcanoes to glaciers
According to this 2020 study, 245 of the world's active volcanoes are located within three miles of ice.
The studys authors, representing the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Dickinson College and the University of La Frontera, presented their findings this week at an international geochemistry conference in Prague. As glaciers retreat, they said, the massive weight of ice gradually lifts off of tectonic plates, alleviating pressure on underground magma chambers and making eruptions more likely.
When you take the load off, its just like opening a Coca-Cola bottle or a champagne bottle, Brad Singer, a geoscientist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, told Bob Berwyn of Inside Climate News. Its under pressure, and the dissolved gasses in the melt come out as bubbles.

Lava erupts from a fissure on Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula near the town of Grindavik on August 22, 2024, during the sixth eruption to hit the area since late 2023. Now, the number of eruptions has risen to eight. Almannavarnadeild (Iceland Civil Defense)/Anadolu via Getty Images
More:
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/melting-glaciers-will-likely-lead-to-more-volcanic-eruptions-study-suggests-now-all-eyes-are-on-antarctica-180986945/