Glacial ice in the Peruvian Andes that took at least 1,600 years to form
has melted in just 25 years, scientists reported Thursday, the latest
indication that the recent spike in global temperatures has thrown the
natural world out of balance.
The evidence comes from a remarkable find at the margins of the
Quelccaya ice cap in
Peru,
the world’s largest tropical ice sheet. Rapid melting there in the
modern era is uncovering plants that were locked in a deep freeze when
the glacier advanced many thousands of years ago.
Dating of those plants, using a radioactive form of carbon in the plant
tissues that decays at a known rate, has given scientists an unusually
precise method of determining the history of the ice sheet’s margins.
The paper includes a long-awaited analysis of chemical tracers in ice
cylinders the team recovered by drilling deep into Quelccaya, a record
that will aid scientists worldwide in reconstructing past climatic
variations.
Such analyses will take time, but Dr. Thompson said preliminary evidence
shows, for example, that the earth probably went through a period of
anomalous weather at around the time of the French Revolution, which
began in 1789. The weather presumably contributed to the food shortages
that exacerbated that upheaval.
“When there’s a disruption of food, this is bad news for any government,” Dr. Thompson said in an interview.
Of greater immediate interest, Dr. Thompson and his team have expanded
on previous research involving long-dead plants emerging from the
melting ice at the edge of Quelccaya, a huge, flat ice cap sitting on a
volcanic plain 18,000 feet above sea level.
Several years ago, the team reported on plants that had been exposed
near a meltwater lake. Chemical analysis showed them to be about 4,700
years old, proving that the ice cap had reached its smallest extent in
nearly five millenniums.
In the new research, a thousand feet of additional melting has exposed
plants that laboratory analysis shows to be about 6,300 years old. The
simplest interpretation, Dr. Thompson said, is that ice that accumulated
over approximately 1,600 years melted back in no more than 25 years.
“If any time in the last 6,000 years these plants had been exposed for
any five-year period, they would have decayed,” Dr. Thompson said. “That
tells us the ice cap had to be there 6,000 years ago.”
Meredith A. Kelly, a glacial geomorphologist at Dartmouth College who
trained under Dr. Thompson but was not involved in the new paper, said
his interpretation of the plant remains was reasonable.
Her own research on Quelccaya suggests that the margins of the glacier
have melted quite rapidly at times in the past. But the melting now
under way appears to be at least as fast, if not faster, than anything
in the geological record since the end of the last ice age, she said.
Global warming, which scientists say is being caused primarily by the
human release of greenhouse gases, is having its largest effects at high
latitudes and high altitudes. Sitting at high elevation in the tropics,
the Quelccaya ice cap appears to be extremely sensitive to the
temperature changes, several scientists said.
“It may not go very quickly because there’s so much ice, but we might
have already locked into a situation where we are committed to losing
that ice,” said Mathias Vuille, a climate scientist at the State
University at Albany in New York.
Throughout the Andes, glaciers are now melting so rapidly that
scientists have grown deeply concerned about water supplies for the
people living there. Glacial meltwater is essential for helping Andean
communities get through the dry season.
In the short run, the melting is producing an increase of water supplies
and feeding population growth in major cities of the Andes, the experts
said. But as the glaciers continue shrinking, trouble almost certainly
looms.
Douglas R. Hardy, a University of Massachusetts researcher who works in
the region, said, “How much time do we have before 50 percent of Lima’s
or La Paz’s water resources are gone?”
end quote from:
No comments:
Post a Comment