The Furtwängler Glacier is located near the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro in Tanzania. Furtwängler Glacier is a small remnant of an enormous icecap  which once crowned the summit of Mount Kilimanjaro. This icecap has  retreated significantly over the past century; between 1912 and 2000, 82  percent of the glacial ice on the mountain has disappeared. The retreat of glacial ice on the summit is expected to continue and by the year 2020, all the glaciers on top of the mountain may be gone,  although seasonal snows will continue to cover the higher sections of  the mountain for several months of the year. The glacier is named after  Walter Furtwängler, who along with Siegfried König, were the fourth to  ascend to the summit of Kilimanjaro in 1912.
Between measurements in 1976 and 2000, the area of Furtwängler Glacier was cut almost in half, from 113,000 m² to 60,000 m².  During fieldwork conducted early in 2006, scientists discovered a large  hole near the center of the glacier. This hole, extending through the  6 meter (20 ft) remaining thickness of the glacier to the underlying  rock, was expected to grow and split the glacier in two by 2007.
The 2006 study found that no new glacial ice has accumulated on any  of the glaciers on the mountain in the 21st century. This may mark the  termination of a unique 11,700 year record of climate variability in  Africa. Only ice cores previously obtained and preserved in the freezers of the laboratories of glaciologists will remain.
A 2010 study, published in the journal Global and Planetary Change, has suggested that glacial retreat on Kilimanjaro has also been influenced by deforestation on the mountain's lower slopes, by reducing the flow of moisture up the mountainside.
The demise of the Furtwängler Glacier, and the other remaining  Kilimanjaro glaciers, may reduce tourism because the novelty of glacier  ice in proximity to the equator is one of the attractions of the area.  Even more immediate is the potential adverse impact on the availability  of fresh water from springs and wells that are partially supplied by  glacier melt. An investigation of the fraction of fresh water supplied by this source is underway. 


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