Current:Home > InvestSurpassing:Ludacris’ gulp of untreated Alaska glacier melt was totally fine, scientist says -Wealth Evolution Experts
Surpassing:Ludacris’ gulp of untreated Alaska glacier melt was totally fine, scientist says
Surpassing Quant Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-07 06:32:28
ANCHORAGE,Surpassing Alaska (AP) — Rapper-turned-actor Chris “Ludacris” Bridges sparked concern from some social media followers when he knelt on an Alaska glacier, dipped an empty water bottle into a blue, pristine pool of water and drank it.
Video of Ludacris tasting the glacial water and proclaiming, “Oh my God!” got millions of views on TikTok and Instagram. Some viewers expressed concern that he was endangering his life by drinking the untreated water, warning it might be contaminated with the parasite giardia.
But an expert on glaciers from the University of Alaska in Fairbanks said the online brouhaha “was ludicrous.”
“He’s totally fine,” glaciologist Martin Truffer said Wednesday.
“It’s sort of understandable that somebody would be concerned about just drinking untreated water, but if you drink water from a melt stream on a glacier, that’s about the cleanest water you’ll ever get.”
Ludacris donned ice cleats to knock off a bucket list item and walk Knik Glacier, about 40 miles (64 kilometers) north of Anchorage, while he was in the nation’s largest state to perform Friday at the Alaska State Fair. He was clearly pleased by the taste of the glacial water.
“I’m a water snob,” he said in a later video before a concert Tuesday in Minneapolis. “It was the best tasting water I’ve ever had in my life.”
Symptoms of giardiasis, the illness caused by giardia, include diarrhea, stomach cramps and dehydration. It can spread from one person to another or through contaminated water, food, surfaces or objects. The Centers for Disease Control suggest people avoid swallowing water while swimming and boiling or filtering water from lakes, springs or rivers before drinking it to prevent getting sick.
The Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation does not recommend drinking untreated surface water, spokeperson Kelly Rawalt said in an email. It also has produced a flyer with safe drinking practices for outdoor enthusiasts, including adding chlorine or iodine to quart-size water containers and letting them sit an hour before drinking.
Truffer, who acknowledged he knew of Ludacris only because his neighbor in Fairbanks named his cat after the rapper, said it’s not always safe to drink water from a stream in the wild. But he said the water Ludacris drank hadn’t had any exposure to biological activity.
“There’s just really no concern on these glacial streams about safety,” he said.
“I’ve done this many, many times myself without ever having any issue,” he said.
Alaska is home to about 100,000 glaciers, with the icy masses covering about 28,800 square miles (74,590 square kilometers) — or 3% of the state. According to the Alaska Department of Natural Resources, that’s 128 times the area covered by glaciers in the other 49 states.
For some visitors to Alaska, seeing a glacier is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. But climate change is taking its toll, and the melting of Juneau’s icefield is accelerating, according to a study that came out last month. The snow-covered area is now shrinking 4.6 times faster than it was in the 1980s.
veryGood! (16617)
Related
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- PHOTOS: If you had to leave home and could take only 1 keepsake, what would it be?
- What’s Eating Away at the Greenland Ice Sheet?
- Julián Castro on Climate Change: Where the Candidate Stands
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Dianna Agron Addresses Rumor She Was Barred From Cory Monteith's Glee Tribute Episode
- Today’s Climate: July 22, 2010
- Kids Challenge Alaska’s Climate Paradox: The State Promotes Oil as Global Warming Wreaks Havoc
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Monkeypox cases in the U.S. are way down — can the virus be eliminated?
Ranking
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Ron DeSantis defends transport of migrants to Sacramento, says he doesn't have sympathy for sanctuary states
- PHOTOS: If you had to leave home and could take only 1 keepsake, what would it be?
- How an on-call addiction specialist at a Massachusetts hospital saved a life
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Climate Change Is Transforming the Great Barrier Reef, Likely Forever
- How an on-call addiction specialist at a Massachusetts hospital saved a life
- Today’s Climate: July 21, 2010
Recommendation
Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
Get $200 Worth of Peter Thomas Roth Anti-Aging Skincare for Just $38
Andrew Yang on Climate Change: Where the Candidate Stands
You're 50, And Your Body Is Changing: Time For The Talk
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Health department medical detectives find 84% of U.S. maternal deaths are preventable
Wildfire smoke causes flight delays across Northeast. Here's what to know about the disruptions.
Pruitt Announces ‘Secret Science’ Rule Blocking Use of Crucial Health Research