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50

An impressive layer of ice covered Imja Glacier in the 1950s. Thick ice falls down from the mountain and the glacier merges with the Lhotse

Shar glacier further down. However, even in the 1950s, small melt water ponds could be seen in and around the glacier. Over the next fifty

years, these ponds continued to grow, merge, and by the mid 1970s had formed the Imja lake.

By 2006, the Imja lake was around 1 km

2

in size, with an average depth of 42 m, and contained more than 35 million m

3

of water. The Imja

Glacier is retreating at a rate of 74 m per year, and is thought to be the fastest retreating glacier in the Himalayas. The thin cover of debris

on this glacier may actually have accelerated surface melting, as heat is transferred to the ice below. Because of the unconsolidated nature

of the lake’s terminal moraine dam, the risk of a glacial lake outburst flood (GLOF) may be high.