Fernández, AMacDonell, ShelleySomos-Valenzuela, MGonzález-Reyes, A2022-07-102022-07-102021-07-060096-3941https://hdl.handle.net/10182/15157Glaciers have long been thought of as static, picturesque totems or as changeless coverings over permanently frozen landscapes, particularly among societies distant from mountains and the poles. However, as traditional mountain cultures with firsthand experience have long known and treasured—and as glaciologists, hydrologists, and climate scientists have deciphered and communicated—glaciers are by no means static. Rather, they are dynamic landscape agents and unmistakable indicators of rapid environmental transformation [Gagné et al., 2014]. With widespread media coverage of anthropogenic climate change and the realization that glaciers are endangered species [Carey, 2007], popular perceptions are gradually changing, and scientists, grassroots movements, and policymakers are increasingly committing to developing legal protections for glaciers.pp.22-24© 2021. The authors.glacierlawChile’s glacier protection law needs grounding in sound scienceOther10.1029/2021EO1605692324-92502022-07-05https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives