Weather Notebook
Bryan Yeaton
 


 
Peru Floods
Tue Jun 29, 2004

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On December 13, 1941, a glacial lake high in the Cordillera Blanca Mountains of Peru burst its banks, triggering a flood that killed an estimated 5,000 people. But this appears to be just a warning sign of worse things to come. Hi, I’m Bryan Yeaton, and this is The Weather Notebook.

In the years that followed the 1941 deluge, a series of so-called outburst floods and avalanches would claim thousands more lives among the half million people who live below these towering mountains. Now scientists believe that what’s really responsible for these disasters may be global warming.

Peru’s Cordillera Blanca Mountains are especially sensitive to rising temperatures because they are so heavily glaciated – in fact, they have more glaciers than any other tropical mountain range in the world. As global temperatures rise, these glaciers have been melting rapidly, and as they melt, they feed the water into scores of new and extremely unstable lakes. Ice chunks from retreating glaciers topple into these lakes, sending up massive waves that rip through the fragile banks. In minutes, the water of an entire lake can come roaring down onto the villages below. Altogether some 30,000 people have died in the shadow of these mountains as a result of avalanches and outburst floods.

In recent years, the Peruvian government has been working to contain the most dangerous of these lakes by lowering water levels and reinforcing shore banks. But if global temperatures continue to rise, as they’re expected to, new lakes will certainly form in the craggy basins of the Cordillera Blanca Mountains – posing the risk for even more catastrophic flooding in the years to come.

David Laskin sent in today’s story. The Weather Notebook is a program of the Mount Washington Observatory, and is supported by Subaru of America and the National Science Foundation.




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