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The frozen reaches of our planet play a vital role in climate stability.

The cryosphere is the name scientists have given to all the frozen water on our planet.  It comes from the Greek word kryos, meaning “cold” or “ice.” These frozen environments form a complex system that helps regulate Earth’s climate and sustain life. 

The cryosphere takes several forms. Snow cover – including the seasonal kind that gets stuck on your boots – stores water and reflects sunlight away from the Earth.  Glaciers are slow-moving rivers of ice formed from compacted snow that carve out landscapes. Ice sheets and ice caps are vast masses of glacial ice found in the polar extremes of the planet. Ice sheets hold nearly two-thirds of the world’s freshwater. Sea ice is frozen ocean water that forms and melts with the seasons, creating a unique habitat for polar ecosystems. River and lake ice are seasonally frozen freshwater bodies of water.  And finally, permafrost is soil that remains frozen for at least two consecutive years, locking in enormous amounts of carbon. 

Although the frozen world can feel distant to those who live in milder climes, it plays a critical role in stabilising the global climate.  Its bright, reflective surfaces send much of the Sun’s energy back into space, helping to keep the Earth cool.  This frozen shield also stores and slowly releases freshwater, moderating sea levels and supporting billions of people and lifeforms. But the cryosphere is rapidly changing. Rising global temperatures are melting glaciers and sea ice, shrinking snow cover, and thawing permafrost.  

Understanding the cryosphere means understanding how tightly Earth’s systems are linked both to each other and to us. 

Snow represents the most direct encounter most people have with the cryosphere. Seasonal snow cover, though temporary, plays a key role in reflecting sunlight, storing water, and linking urban life to the planet’s broader frozen systems. Photo: Christian Thiel / Shutterstock
Japan is home to some of the snowiest inhabited regions on the planet. In places like Aomori Prefecture, snow totals can exceed 17 meters (55 feet) per year. This powerful collision of ocean, wind, and terrain makes Japan a vivid example of how geography shapes the cryosphere far beyond the poles. Photo: Nora Holley

 
In Norway’s snow-covered mountains, five figures move in a thin line across an expanse of white, their footprints creating a distinct line through the vast landscape. Photo: Yongmei Gong
Fjallsárlón (Fjarllsarlon), a glacial lagoon in Iceland, located on the southern end of Vatnajökull glacier.  Photo: I Wei Huang / Shutterstock 
In this scene from Alaska, the cryosphere reveals its layers – snow falling over a frozen river, a trace of melt at its edge, and distant peaks locked in glacier and cloud. Photo: Wirestock Creators / Shutterstock
This aerial view of the fractured surface of a frozen lake reveals the power and fragility of the cryosphere. Photo: Ryzhkov Oleksandr / Shutterstock
In Longyearbyen, Svalbard, Norway, thawing permafrost reveals layers of ice, soil, and long-frozen organic matter. Permafrost covers a quarter of the Northern Hemisphere and holds twice as much carbon as the atmosphere — enough that, if released, it would roughly double the total amount of carbon currently in the air. Photo: Photostravellers / Shutterstock
The Milky Way can be seen high above the snow-dusted, sheer peaks of the Himalayas, the highest mountain range on Earth. Photo: Parth Menghal / Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai
Greenland’s interior is covered by an ice sheet, which at this point near Kangerlussuaq meets a river that carries away the meltwater. Photo: Vadim_N / Shutterstock
Gentoo penguins cross the ice, preparing to dive into frigid Antarctic water. Polar wildlife is highly exposed to the effects of global warming. Globally, an estimated 73% of vertebrate populations have declined between 1970-2020 due to human-caused environmental changes. Photo: Mozgova / Shutterstock
A vivid example of the layers of the cryosphere and the reality that each layer is directly linked to and affected by the next. This image captures an Icelandic glacier lagoon filled with icebergs, surrounded by frozen permafrost and snow-covered mountain. Photo: Oksana Yermoshenko / Shutterstock
A rare view of the Cascade Volcanic Arc across Washington and Oregon, USA. Mount Rainier rises in the foreground, with Mount St. Helens, Mount Adams and Mount Hood in the distance. Photo: Charis Brice / REVOLVE
The Greenlandic Ilulissat icebergs, formed from glacier ice more than 250,000 years old, tower above the water at up to 60 meters (197 feet) high, and stem from the nearby Jakobshavn Glacier. Photo: Mathias Berlin / Shutterstock
The Cascades in summer mark one phase of the cryosphere’s continuous cycle – snow becomes water, water sustains life, and soon, snow will return. This delicate exchange between frozen and fluid connects mountains to oceans and reminds us that the cryosphere is not static but a living system, shaping the planet’s climate, water, and future. Photo: Charis Brice / REVOLVE