Glaciers are natural ice bodies that have existed for many years on the surface of polar or alpine regions and have a state of movement along the ground. Glaciers are formed by ice formation such as compaction, recrystallization and refreezing of snow.


1. Furtwängler Glacier



Glacier near the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania. The Furtwängler Glacier is a small ice cap that once crowned the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro. This ice sheet has retreated dramatically over the past century, from 1912 to 2000, and 82 percent of the glacial ice on the mountain has disappeared. The retreating glacier ice summit is expected to last until 2020, and all summit glaciers may disappear, although seasonal snowpack will continue to pay for higher mountains for many months.


2. Lambert Glacier



Lambert Glacier is the main glacier. In the Guinness Book of Records, the data of Lambert Glacier was queried. The length of the adult body reached 400 kilometers, the width reached 100 kilometers deep, and it could reach 2.5 kilometers, and it slowly flowed through Prince Charles Mountain with a uniform speed. In fact, Lambert Glacier is very special. There are very few moving glaciers that can be found in the world, but Lambert is very curious.


3. Vatnajökull Glacier



Vatnajökull Glacier, located near the city of Horth in southeastern Iceland, ranks third in the world and the largest in Europe. The glacier covers an area of ​​8,300 square kilometers, second only to Antarctic glaciers and Greenland glaciers. It is a major feature of the glacier tour to take a yacht on the iceberg lake to watch the floes of various shapes.


4. Lange Glacier



The Lange Glacier Lava Falls are unique to the western Lange Glacier and are a waterfall that flows from lava, not a river. The hot springs with the largest water flow in the world, the Dele Datongga hot springs, also add color to the Langhe Glacier.