The international scientific community is expressing deep concern over the rapid movement of the Thwaites Glacier, which has been dubbed "Doomsday Glacier" due to its colossal size and potential impact on the Earth's ecosystem. This giant glacier, comparable in area to the United Kingdom, is undergoing significant movement, and recent satellite observations indicate the beginning of its massive movement. The primary cause of this destabilization is warm ocean waters, which are penetrating beneath the glacier's base and rapidly eroding it from within. This process has already led to the formation of deep cracks and the loss of structural integrity of the ice sheet, raising the risk of its complete collapse in the foreseeable future.
Experts estimate the scale of the potential catastrophe as unprecedented for modern civilization. According to preliminary calculations, the destruction of Thwaites Glacier alone would immediately lead to a rise in global sea levels of at least 60 centimeters. However, the main danger lies in the domino effect: the disappearance of this glacier would open the way for warm currents to reach other massifs of West Antarctica, which, in the worst-case scenario, would trigger a global sea level rise of 3-5 meters. Such changes threaten the complete inundation of major coastal cities and a radical redrawing of the world map. An international expedition is currently working in the region, the findings of which, once completed, will be decisive for the development of global measures to adapt humanity to irreversible climate change.











