I didn't buy it yet..
A long history of research documents that McCall Glacier, Arctic
Alaska, USA, continues to lose mass at a rate that is likely increasing
with time. We present a photo comparison (1958-2003) that visually
documents these volume changes, along with survey measurements that
quantify these losses. Measurements of longitudinal profiles initially
acquired from airborne laser altimetry, and repeated by ground-based
surveys, indicate that the areally averaged rate of thinning increased
between 1956-93 and 1993-2002, from 0.35 ± 0.07 m a−1 to 0.47 ± 0.03 m a−1, respectively; total volume loss was (8.3 × 107) ± (1.7 × 107) m3 and (2.7 × 107) ± (0.2 × 107) m3
(all in water equivalent) for these two time periods. These profiles
also indicate that a 1 km stretch of the mid-ablation area is behaving
differently from this trend, with a rate of thinning that is not
changing with time. Lastly we present a comparison of several methods
for calculating volume change and assess their relative errors.