The Greater Caucasus is one of the most extensively glacierized mountain systems in mid-latitude Eurasia and has experienced substantial glacier retreat in recent decades. Continuous monitoring using high-resolution satellite observations is therefore essential for accurately quantifying ongoing and future changes. In this study, we present a new glacier inventory for 2025 derived from high-resolution (3 m) PlanetScope satellite imagery combined with topographic information from the 30 m Advanced Land Observing Satellite (ALOS) Global Digital Surface Model (2006–2011). A total of 101 cloud-free PlanetScope scenes, acquired primarily during August–September 2025, were manually delineated to ensure precise glacier boundary detection. Regional climatic data, including summer temperature and winter precipitation from the ERA5 reanalysis, were compiled to support interpretation of glacier changes since the 1960s. The new inventory identifies 2341 glaciers covering 964.0 ± 22.8 km2 across the Greater Caucasus. Glacier distribution is highly uneven: most of the glacier-covered area is found in the Central Caucasus (730.2 ± 15.5 km2), whereas considerably smaller glacierized areas occur in the Western and Eastern sectors. Most glaciers are located on northern slopes (687.7 ± 16.0 km2), reflecting strong topographic and climatic asymmetry. Mean glacier elevations range from ~3300 to 3600 m a.s.l., increasing eastward in response to decreasing precipitation. Size-class analysis shows that small glaciers (5.0 km2) contribute disproportionately to total glacier area. Comparison with previous inventories indicates continued and accelerated glacier retreat, particularly since 2014, with a mean area loss rate of −1.8% yr−1. These comparisons further show that a total of 965 glaciers (~122.9 km2) have become extinct across the Greater Caucasus since the 1960s. This trend is primarily driven by increasing summer temperatures and declining winter precipitation. This high-resolution inventory provides the most detailed glacier dataset currently available for the Greater Caucasus and establishes an updated benchmark for future glacier monitoring, climate change studies, and hydrological assessments.
Tielidze et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: