Yet Yosemite geologist Greg Stock and naturalist Pete Devine said their research does not show that global warming is behind the melting glaciers, despite increased greenhouse gases. Devine and Stock say the glaciers that still remain in the park—a remnant from the last glaciation over 15,000 years ago—are responsible for the park’s iconic landscapes. Over time, the glaciers have created such formations as El Capitan, the Half Dome, and the Yosemite Valley that brings in visitors from around the world.

During the last glaciation, 75 percent of Yosemite was covered by behemoth-sized glaciers, which carved up and scored the ground, chiseling out the park’s smooth granite. But the two largest glaciers, Lyell and Maclure, may be gone in few decades. Devine believes Lyell glacier, named after the eighteenth-century geologist Charles Lyell, will be a “corpse” in 20 years. But should natural changes in natureget blamed on global warming?

From the Sacramento Bee, a sobering look at climate change and the fate of a Sierra Nevada glacier: http://www.sacbee.com/news/local/environment/article104776131.html .

Photo published for Disappearing Yosemite glacier becomes symbol of climate change

Disappearing Yosemite glacier becomes symbol of climate change

Lyell Glacier in Yosemite National Park has shrunk by 78 percent over the past 130 years, becoming a vivid example of the destructive effects of climate change.

sacbee.com

Moving like a glacier

When Muir described the glaciers of Yosemite he was mocked by the ‘consensus’geologists who said he had only discovered ice fields and not actual glaciers. So Muir and Galen Clark, a Yosemite Park supervisor, devised a #Science project. They planted five stakes in Maclure Glacier and returned after a month and a half. Muir found all the stakes had moved and one had traveled nearly 47 inches. That was in 1875. Muir also noted the Lyell Glacier was less than a mile long and probably had an original length of over forty miles during the last glaciation.

Four years ago, Stock, Devine and Robert Anderson (a geologist) repeated Muir’s stake test in the Lyell and Maclure Glaciers. When they came back, there was no movement of the Lyell Glacier. But the Maclure Glacier was moving roughly one inch per day, the same speed John Muir wrote about in 1875. Despite the climate change hype, things were happening at the same speed as 150 years ago.

Obama Makes Global Warming Pitch At Yosemite With A 40-Car Motorcade http://dailycaller.com/2016/06/20/obama-makes-global-warming-pitch-at-yellowstone-with-a-40-car-motorcade/  via @dailycaller

Photo published for Obama Makes Global Warming Pitch At Yosemite With A 40-Car Motorcade Via @dailycaller

Obama Makes Global Warming Pitch At Yosemite With A 40-Car Motorcade Via @dailycaller

Obama’s round-trip flight was the equivalent of providing 22 homes energy for an entire year

dailycaller.com

That’s because Stock and the other researchers had proven the Maclure Glacier wasn’t shrinking faster when compared to 1875, despite higher CO2 levels. From 1883 to 2015, Maclure had shortened roughly 64 acres. Lyell’s mass has shrunk, but its length has remained the same. That’s in line with what Professor Jeffrey Schaffer of Napa Valley College wrote in his extensive guidebook to Yosemite National Park: The glaciers in the valley above “5,600 feet haven’t changed much in the past 30 million years.”