Thirty metres will be slashed off the official height of New Zealand's tallest peak, following new measurements by Otago University researchers.
While Aoraki/Mt Cook is currently officially listed as 3,754 metres above sea level, analysis of high accuracy GPS data obtained during an Otago-led climbing expedition in November has revealed that it is actually only 3,724m tall at its highest point.
The readings confirm new aerial photography-based calculations performed by Otago National School of Surveying researcher Dr Pascal Sirguey and Masters student Sebastian Vivero.
Dr Sirguey, the project leader for the research, said the discrepancy between the old height - estimated from aerial photography immediately following a massive rock-ice collapse in December 1991 - and the new height can be explained by a two-decades-long reshaping process affecting the remnant of the originally thick ice cap.
"By carefully studying photos taken after the collapse, it appears that there was still a relatively thick ice cap, which was most likely out of balance with the new shape of the summit ridge," he said.