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201204Apr18:13

State of Polar Regions revis­ited by U.S. National Research Council!

Infor­ma­tion
pub­lished 04 April 2012 | mod­i­fied 07 April 2012
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Today the U.S. National Research Coun­cil released a syn­the­sis of reports from thou­sands of sci­en­tists in 60 coun­tries who took part in the Inter­na­tional Polar Year (IPY) 2007-​08, the first in over 50 years to offer a bench­mark for envi­ron­men­tal con­di­tions and new dis­cov­er­ies in the polar regions.

Uni­ver­sity of Mass­a­chu­setts Amherst geo­sciences researcher and expert in the pale­o­cli­mate of the Arc­tic, Julie Brigham-​Grette, co-​chaired the NRC report, “Lessons and Lega­cies of the IPY 200708″ with lead­ing Antarc­tic cli­mate sci­en­tist Robert Bind­schadler of NASA.

Among the major find­ings is that global warm­ing is chang­ing the face of Antarc­tica and the Arc­tic faster than expected. For exam­ple, in 2007 sci­en­tists doc­u­mented a 27 per­cent loss of sea ice in a sin­gle year, Brigham-​Grette says. Also, ice sheets around the poles are now show­ing evi­dence of seri­ous retreat, expected to con­tinue and per­haps accel­er­ate over com­ing cen­turies as warm ocean cur­rents melt the ice front faster than any­one had grasped before. Sea level rise from melt­ing polar ice sheets is today slowly affect­ing every shore­line on the planet. A per­sonal account of Lea Lane (Huff­in­g­ton post 04.04.2012) see­ing polar ice melt­ing before her eyes can be found here.

polar bear

As a result of this work, we have a new bench­mark. Seven of 12 Antarc­tic Penin­sula ice shelves are either gone or now in severe decline,” she adds. “This type of infor­ma­tion makes the report all the more impor­tant because the changes we expect to see in the next few decades are going to be incredible.”

I think if you look at every­thing we’ve learned, we see the polar regions are much more vul­ner­a­ble to global warm­ing than we thought. Global bio­log­i­cal and oceano­graphic sys­tems are respond­ing faster than we ever expected. Earth has gone through this before, and some past warm cycles have been extreme, but we as humans have never seen any­thing like it in our 10,000 years on the planet. It’s extraordinary.

World­wide, scores of oceanog­ra­phers, mete­o­rol­o­gists, geol­o­gists, cli­mate sci­en­tists, ecol­o­gists and other researchers con­tributed to the report. For exam­ple, biol­o­gists doc­u­ment diatoms, micro­scopic phy­to­plank­ton at the base of the food chain, in North Atlantic waters where they hadn’t been in 800,000 years, the last time the Arc­tic pro­vided a cold bar­rier to migra­tion, Brigham-​Grette says. Fish spe­cial­ists see com­mer­cial and other species migrat­ing ever north­ward to suit­able habi­tats. “The fish­er­men are fol­low­ing,” she says. “It’s a whole new ball­game for the U.S. Coast Guard and those try­ing to reg­u­late harvests.”

The UMass Amherst geoscientist’s own research using ancient sed­i­ment cores from North­east Russia’s Lake El’gygytgyn offers a new look at how Antarc­tic and Arc­tic warm­ing over the last few mil­lion years occurred in sync when forced by the earth sys­tem and feed­backs. “We’re begin­ning to see that when the west Antarc­tic ice sheet col­lapses, the Arc­tic warms up. This is a new bench­mark link­ing warm­ing events in these two places for the first time.”

west antarctica

In the Antarc­tic, new imag­ing tech­niques deployed dur­ing the recent IPY allowed sci­en­tists for the first time to visu­al­ize a new range, the Gam­burt­sev Moun­tains, with peaks as big as the Alps under the east Antarc­tic ice sheet. They may have been the ice sheet’s nucleus mil­lions of years ago. Oth­ers found hun­dreds of fresh­wa­ter lakes under Antarc­tic ice, with more being dis­cov­ered every day.

As they release the NRC report to pol­i­cy­mak­ers this week, Brigham-​Grette says the authors under­stand that lead­ers must try to bal­ance the country’s energy needs at the same time they address global cli­mate change by decreas­ing fos­sil fuel use.

Two social advances to emerge from the recent IPY are a remark­able increase in the num­ber of women and minori­ties in lead­er­ship roles in sci­ence com­pared to 50 years ago along with the “mas­sive” edu­ca­tional effort and increased inter­est in and pub­lic aware­ness of issues fac­ing polar regions, she adds.

Among sci­en­tists, the IPY led to many new inter­na­tional and multi-​disciplinary col­lab­o­ra­tions that promise to con­tinue, says Brigham-​Grette, plus a new inter­na­tional net­work of young polar sci­en­tists. “With the expense of travel and research today, no one coun­try can do it alone, so there’s more shar­ing of resources and data. It’s a very much richer envi­ron­ment for study today.”

The above news item is reprinted from mate­ri­als avail­able at News­wise. Orig­i­nal text may be edited for con­tent and length.

(Source: News­wise, 03.04.2012; Uni­ver­sity of Mass­a­chu­setts News Release, 03.04.2012)

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