The glaciers in Montana's Glacier National Park are rapidly disappearing.Some have been reduced by as much as 85 percent over the past 50 years, while the average loss is 39 percent, according to a new study from the U.S. Geological Survey and Portland State University.The researchers looked at historic trends for 39 glaciers, 37 of which are found in the park. The other two are on U.S. Forest Service land.The stark data actually calls into question whether all of these formations are still glaciers. In fact, the scientists found that only 26 of them are still larger than 25 acres — a common benchmark for determining whether a mass of ice is classified as a glacier.Early last century, the park had about 150 glaciers that passed that benchmark.Glaciers and ice sheets are melting all over the world due to climate change. But as Montana Public Radio explains, "that warming is happening faster in western Montana, where temperatures have increased at a rate almost double the global average."USGS research ecologist Dan Fagre tells the station: "We are kind of a bellwether, we're an early indicator of the kinds of changes that are going to occur elsewhere."The researchers compared maps from aerial photographs and satellites with historic data from 1966, 1998, 2005 and 2015/2016. It's part of a larger project to track changes in glaciers in Montana, Alaska and Washington state.The park says its glaciers are thousands of years old: