International audienceGlaciers act as very good climate indicators, and the relationship they develop with climate can be exploited at 2 levels. First of all, changes in meteorological conditions are directly recorded in glacier mass balance changes (in the form of either winter precipitation or summer ablation). Therefore, from separately measuring these two terms, climatic trends can be inferred and corresponding results are all the better as mass balance series are spanning longer periods. These mass balance changes then later express under the form of fluctuations in glacier length and thickness and/or ice surface velocities. Measuring these changes is another means of inferring climate change, although the relationship is much more com...