HomeWorldWhy Alaska’s melting glaciers could trigger the next deadly tsunami

Why Alaska’s melting glaciers could trigger the next deadly tsunami

Scientists warn that climate change is destabilising mountainsides above Alaska’s fjords, threatening cruise ships and coastal towns with sudden, massive waves.

October 25, 2025 / 12:24 IST
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One August morning, an entire mountainside in Alaska’s Tracy Arm fjord collapsed into the sea, unleashing a tsunami as tall as the Empire State Building. It ripped up forests, stripped nearby islands bare, and created whirlpools powerful enough to drag kayaks offshore. Miraculously, a nearby National Geographic cruise ship survived only because an S-shaped bend in the fjord softened the wave’s impact. Scientists say the incident was a warning: a glimpse of how fragile Alaska’s glacial landscapes have become, CNN reported.

Glaciers retreating, slopes collapsing

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Alaska has warmed 4.5°F since 1950, the fastest of any US state. As its glaciers melt, they no longer hold surrounding mountainsides in place. That loss of natural support has set off more than a thousand “slow-moving landslides,” with some slopes shifting more than 10 feet a year. When millions of tons of rock fall into deep water, they can displace enough to create catastrophic tsunamis—some, like Tracy Arm’s, among the largest in recorded history.

A rising risk for cruise tourism