• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Glacier Melting Destroys Climate Data, Disrupting Ice Archive Plans

January 29, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Scientists have had to stop using the Corbassière glacier in Valais, Switzerland, as a record of the changing climate, because the climate has changed too much. 

Much of what we know about the Earth’s climate, we have learned from ice. Glaciers capture bubbles of air that reveal atmospheric concentrations of gasses when the ice formed. Isotopes of oxygen in the water molecules provide clues to temperatures at the time. Pollutants trapped in the ice contain their own information. 

Advertisement

Together, these inspire climatologists to travel to Greenland, Antarctica, and the tops of mountains to obtain ice cores. However, they only work because ice is laid down in layers each winter. These, like the rings of trees, provide information on the events of that particular year – if the layers cannot be distinguished, the ice ceases to serve its purpose.

Some ice sheets record the climate over hundreds of thousands of years, but the ice in the Corbassière is of much more recent ilk. Near its top, it consists of firn: a stage in the process of snow becoming ice. An average of 2 meters (7 feet) of firn from each year between 2011 and 2018 is found at Corbassière, allowing for much greater resolution than most locations.

Summer winds bring pollution in the form of ammonium, nitrate, and sulfate to the Alps, where they are deposited on glaciers like Corbassière. Colder winter air rises less, and concentrations of these particulates fall.

Advertisement

When Paul Scherrer Institute PhD student Carla Huber and Professor Margit Schwikowski studied a 14-meter (49-foot) core collected in 2018, they could see the previous seven years in outstanding detail. Yet an 18-meter (59-foot) 2020 core produced very different results, with lower trace concentrations, and far less seasonal variation.

Huber, Schwikowski, and colleagues conclude recent summers have gotten so hot that the glacier melted so deeply that even layers buried beneath meters of firn were affected. Deposits from different seasons mixed, leading to smoothing out, Moreover, some of the meltwater drained away, causing gaps in the glacier to sink to the bottom. “Apparently the water there did not freeze again, concentrating the trace substances,” said Schwikowski in a statement. “But instead it drained off and literally washed them away.”

The team compared the process to a library break-in where pieces of different books get mixed up, and some are stolen altogether.

This would be worrying enough for the future if Grand Combin, from which the glacier flows, had experienced some freak event. However, the nearest weather stations indicate it did not. Instead, it has simply warmed in line with the global average.

Advertisement

“From this we conclude that there was no singular trigger for this strong melting, but that it resulted from many warm years in the recent past,” Schwikowski said. “It seems a threshold has been crossed, which now has led to a comparatively strong effect.”

It’s yet another example of how the effects of climate change are surprising even those who have been studying it for decades, and seldom in a good way. “For a long time it has been clear that the glacier tongues are retreating. But we would not have thought that the areas feeding high alpine glaciers would also be so severely affected – that is, their highest part, where the ice replenishment is formed,” Schwikowski said.

Schwikowski is part of a project by the Ice Memory Foundation seeking to collect cores from 20 endangered glaciers before they melt, and store them in a global climate archive. Corbassière was to be one of these. The 2018 core may still be included, but Schwikowski says much of the 2020 core is now useless. The transition between hard and soft layers as a result of melting and refreezing almost destroyed a very expensive drill bit. Plans to drill much deeper to collect thousands of years’ worth of data were abandoned.

Advertisement

“At the Grand Combin, we’re already too late.” Schwikowski said.

It’s possible that nearby glaciers could take Corbassière’s place in the archive, but with all but two of the Alps’ glaciers starting at lower altitudes, the rest may be similarly affected.

Footage of the spectacular retreat of many glaciers has become a symbol and warning of global heating – but even where the effects are not visible to the naked eye, the consequences may still be serious.

“The threat of glacial-archived information being lost forever is a major challenge faced by the scientific community, as it forms one of the best records of past climatic and environmental changes,” the paper on the situation notes.

Advertisement

The study is published open access in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Paris ramps up security as jihadist attacks trial starts
  2. Cricket-‘Western bloc’ has let Pakistan down, board chief says
  3. Ancient Bison Found In Permafrost Is So Well Preserved Scientists Want To Clone It
  4. Where Inside Us Do We Feel Love?

Source Link: Glacier Melting Destroys Climate Data, Disrupting Ice Archive Plans

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The Mathematical Paradox That Lets You Create Something From Nothing
  • Ancient Asteroid Ripped Apart In Collision Had Flowing Water
  • Flying Foxes Include The World’s Biggest Bat And The Largest Mammal Capable Of True Flight
  • NASA Responds To Claims That Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Is An Advanced Alien Spacecraft
  • Millions Of Tons Of Gold Are In Earth’s Oceans, Potentially Worth Over $2 Quadrillion
  • The Race Back To The Moon: US Vs China, Will What Happens Next Change The Future?
  • NOAA Issues G3 Geomagnetic Storm Warning As 500,000 Kilometer Hole Sends Solar Wind At Earth
  • Lasting 776 Days, This Is The Longest Case Of COVID-19 Ever Recorded
  • Living Cement: The Microbes In Your Walls Could Power The Future
  • What Can Your Earwax Reveal About Your Health?
  • Ever Seen A Giraffe Use An Inhaler? Now You Can, And It’s Incredibly Wholesome
  • Martian Mudstone Has Features That Might Be Biosignatures, New Brain Implant Can Decode Your Internal Monologue, And Much More This Week
  • Crocodiles Weren’t All Blood-Thirsty Killers, Some Evolved To Be Plant-Eating Vegetarians
  • Stratospheric Warming Event May Be Unfolding In The Southern Polar Vortex, Shaking Up Global Weather Systems
  • 15 Years Ago, Bees In Brooklyn Appeared Red After Snacking Where They Shouldn’t
  • Carnian Pluvial Event: It Rained For 2 Million Years — And It Changed Planet Earth Forever
  • There’s Volcanic Unrest At The Campi Flegrei Caldera – Here’s What We Know
  • The “Rumpelstiltskin Effect”: When Just Getting A Diagnosis Is Enough To Start The Healing
  • In 1962, A Boy Found A Radioactive Capsule And Brought It Inside His House — With Tragic Results
  • This Cute Creature Has One Of The Largest Genomes Of Any Mammal, With 114 Chromosomes
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version