Brüggen Glacier

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Brüggen Glacier
Brüggen Glacier and surroundig area, September 2001
Brüggen Glacier and surroundig area, September 2001
Type Tidewater glacier
Location Chile
Coordinates 49°13′S, 74°00′W[1]
Area 1,265 km² [1]
Length 64 km [1]
Terminus Sealevel
Status Advancing

Brüggen Glacier, also known as Pío XI Glacier, is in southern Chile and is the largest western outflow from the Southern Patagonian Ice Field. Now about 64 km in length, it is one of the longest glacier in the southern hemisphere outside of Antarctica. Unlike most glaciers worldwide, it advanced significantly since 1945. From 1945 to 1976, Brüggen surged 5 km across the Eyre Fjord, reaching the western shore by 1962 and cutting off Lake Greve from the sea. The glacier continued advancing both northward and southward in the fjord to near its present position before stabilizing. The growth covers a distance of more than 10 km north to south, adding nearly 60 square km of ice.

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