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Iceland mourns death of glacier with a commemorative plaque

Click to play video: 'Memorial plaque pays tribute  to former Iceland glacier'
Memorial plaque pays tribute to former Iceland glacier
WATCH: Memorial plaque pays tribute to former Iceland glacier – Aug 18, 2019

It was a funeral for ice.

With poetry, moments of silence and political speeches about the urgent need to fight climate change, Icelandic officials, activists and others bade goodbye to what once was a glacier.

Icelandic geologist Oddur Sigurdsson pronounced the Okjokull glacier extinct about a decade ago. But on Sunday he brought a death certificate to the made-for-media memorial.

After about 100 people made a two-hour hike up a volcano, children installed a memorial plaque to the glacier, now called just “Ok,” minus the Icelandic word for glacier.

The glacier used to stretch six square miles (15 square kilometres), Sigurdsson said. Residents reminisced about drinking pure water thousands of years old from Ok.

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INTERACTIVE: Compare the size of the OK glacier in 30 years in these two pictures, one from Sept. 1986 and the other from Aug. 2016. 

“The symbolic death of a glacier is a warning to us, and we need action,” former Irish president Mary Robinson said.

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This was Iceland’s first glacier to disappear. But Sigurdsson said all of the nation’s ice masses will be gone in 200 years.

WATCH: U.S. scientists tracking melting ice in Greenland after recent heatwave

Click to play video: 'U.S. scientists tracking melting ice in Greenland after recent heatwave'
U.S. scientists tracking melting ice in Greenland after recent heatwave

“We see the consequences of the climate crisis,” Icelandic Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdottir said. “We have no time to lose.”

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Jakobsdottir said she will make climate change a priority when Nordic leaders and German Chancellor Angela Merkel meet in Reykjavik on Tuesday.

“I know my grandchildren will ask me how this day was and why I didn’t do enough,” said Gunnhildur Hallgrimsdottir, 17.

The plaque, which notes the level of heat-trapping carbon dioxide, also bears a message to the future: “This monument is to acknowledge that we know what is happening and what needs to be done. Only you know if we did it.”

A monument is unveiled at site of Okjokull, Iceland’s first glacier lost to climate change in the west of Iceland on August 18, 2019. (Photo by Jeremie RICHARD / AFP) (Photo credit should read. JEREMIE RICHARD/AFP/Getty Images

 

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