Yes. There are many glaciers in the Himalayas.
The climate near the Himalayas is extremely harsh, ranging from humid to icy. There are glaciers, rivers, forests, and jungles.
The sea level will increase and a considerable portion of the Indian plate will go under sea, the cause of this melting of glaciers is Global warming and depletion of Ozone layer.
The river and spring systems that run from the ice/glacier in the Himalayas is a source of drinking water for residents living in regions close to the Himalayas. If the glaciers melt away the residents lose their source of drinking water.
The Himalayas is a mountain range in the north-eastern part of India, Nepal, Pakistan and China, among others. The Himalayas is a rugged region. It is largely snow-covered, and there are around 15,000 glaciers in the region. The Himalayas is the birthplace of major rivers such as the Ganga, Brahmaputra and the Indus. There are several lakes, forests and cultivated lands in the lower regions of the Himalayas.
The Himalayan Mountains are a range of mountains situtuated to the North of India, spreading out through Pakistan and Nepal. The most characteristic features of the Himalayas are their great height, the structure in which they stand tall, snowcapped peaks, beautiful glaciers, deep rivers that flow from the top, and rich vegetation. From south to north the Himalayan ranges can be grouped into four parallel belts of varying width namely the Outer, or Sub, Himalayas; the Lesser, or Lower, Himalayas. Viewed from the south, the Himalayas appear as a gigantic crescent with the main axis rising above the snow line, where snowfields, alpine glaciers, and avalanches all feed lower-valley glaciers that in turn constitute the sources of most of the Himalayan rivers. They are the tallest Mountain range on the entire earth.
India is not at the equator, though it is located at a latitude generally associated with warm climate. The glaciers of India are in the Himalayas, the tallest mountain range in the world. No matter the latitude, it is always cold at high elevation. Even at the equator, the air more than 5 kilometers above sea level is almost always below freezing. Temperatures in the Himalayas are certainly low enough to support the formation of glaciers.
The Ganges and the Indus Rivers, and many smaller ones in Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and Burma and are all fed with melting water from the Himalayas. The water comes from glaciers in the mountains. If global warming melts the glaciers in the Himalayan Mountains as it is beginning to, then these great rivers, that millions of people rely on, will dry up. Global warming through human emissions are particularly noted in this area as tourists bring fuels in and the tourist trade itself is blamed for a great deal of the melting of these glaciers. (see link)
Punjab Himalayas, Kumaon Himalayas , Nepal Himalayas and Assam Himalayas.
Punjab Himalayas, Kumaon Himalayas , Nepal Himalayas and Assam Himalayas.
Punjab Himalayas, Kumaon Himalayas , Nepal Himalayas and Assam Himalayas.
There are 2 main types of glaciers, Continental is one, they float away from central regions. The second is alpine or valley which are the glaciers that flow down the valley from the mountain.