Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Global Mountian Glacier's Melting Away

         Many glaciers worldwide are melting faster than previous estimations as Earth's climates cycle through warm and cool periods. Greenland, Canada, Peru, and Nepal are a few examples given, showing both minor and major changes that occur as glaciers tend to melt. Environmental research by several research teams across the globe show a trend of glacial ice melt that may endanger human settlements, drinking water, and the climates we are currently adjusted to.
        Greenland’s glaciers are melting much faster than previously estimated and may be more sensitive to climate change than previously assumed. New research also states they can also quickly expand during relatively short periods of climatic cooling.
Jason Briner, a professor of geology at the University of the Greenland, said, “When we look at the geologic record, we are finding out that the large rivers of ice that drain ice sheets are extremely sensitive to climate change, both warming and cooling. Probably the larger these rivers of ice are, the more sensitive they are to climate change.” Greenland researchers also identified another stage of advancement around 8,200 years ago by dating boulders where the glacier once stood. Although the researchers cannot say how much the ice cap grew by during these times, they claim the fact that it advanced at all during short cooling periods during warming times demonstrates a high sensitivity to climate change.
       The glaciers of Canada's Saint Elias region which is nearly 98 cubic miles of ice are estimated to likely be cut in half by 2100, in normal melt scenarios. In other parts of the Canadian Rockies today's glaciers will all but disappear completely, while others will shrink to 5-20% percent of their current size. We may be witness to the disappearance of the glaciers of western North America.
Although it is estimated that if all of the world's mountain glaciers were to melt, the effect on sea level rise would be minimal. If all of western Canada's glaciers were to completely melt away, the oceans would rise by a quarter of an inch
       Nepal's Ngozumpa glacier is melting away at a rapid pace and retreating at its edges because of global warming. The Himalayas have been warming considerably more than the global mean temperature in recent decades. Glaciers in most of the region are showing signs of thinning, shrinking, and retreating, which is giving way to a lot of melt water. On Ngozumpa, some of this water is seen to pool on the surface and then drain away through caverns and streams to the mouth of the glacier. A colossal lake is now growing,called Spillway, and is likely to be about 6km long, 1km wide and 100m deep. The concern is that this huge mass of water could ultimately break through the debris dam that blocks it and hurtle down the valley, sweeping away the Sherpa villages in its path. According to the scientists, although the threat is not immediate, but it is a situation that requires monitoring. In one incidence a camera captured a glacial lake losing more than 100,000 cubic meters of water in just two days.  Within five days, the lake had recovered half the volume, fed by waters from higher up the glacier.
      As Earth's mountain glaciers melt away faster than they have at any other time, we should take heed to the climates increasing warming period and take further precautions environmentally to ensure that humans are not the cause for this major meltdown. The loss of these glaciers could have a severe impact in how we live and survive on our planet. Further research should be pursued to ensure that these natural wonders don't slip away into our lakes and oceans and cause an increased risk to Earth's and our own well-being.
  

 

Sources Cited: 

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Hawaii's Kilauea Volcano

     January 2012 will celebrate the 100th anniversary of the United States Geological Survey’s Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, located on the rim of KÄ«lauea Volcano’s summit caldera. Hawaiian eruptions are generally non-explosive and can be observed and studied with relative safety, allowing scientists and geologist to better understand eruptive processes and products and providing tourists unforgettable memories.  Over geologic time, volcanic activity, in Hawaii and elsewhere in the world, has created and shaped more than eighty percent of the Earth’s surface, above and below the sea.
      One of the world's most active volcanoes, Kilauea began a  long-term eruption from the east rift zone in 1983. It is one of five coalescing volcanoes that comprise the island of Hawaii and is also the youngest. Eruptions at Kilauea originate primarily from the summit caldera or along one of the long east and south rift zones that extend from the caldera to the sea. According to Discovery News, a new assessment of Kilauea's activity suggests that the volcano may simply be in a lull between violent eruptions. Discovery cites carbon dating of the old eruptions as an indication that "the volcano was explosive for 60 percent of the past 2,500 years. It just happens to be in one of its more peaceful, lava-flow stages at the moment."
     Despite this peaceful lull the shield volcano did manage to erupt with a surge of lava that reached  eighty feet into the air this past May, 2011. Hawaii Volcanoes National Park closed the Chain of Craters Road (major tourism and hiking hot spot) all east rift zone and coastal trails during the event. It managed to leave a new 1.4 mile gash along the east rift zone. The United States Geological Survey has kept up a live webcam stream of the eruption and the volcanoes current status which remains viewable on their website.
     Hawaiian authorities allow thousands of visitors each year to hike closely to the Kilauea volcano's lava streams that feed into the sea. Don Swanson, a geologist with the Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, has referred to Kilauea as a high-risk area. “Though the explosions may be smaller, there are a lot more people in the area, so the risk is very high,” he reportedly told a news conference Tuesday at the annual fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco. “So we have to be very concerned."An eruption in 1790 that killed several hundred people makes Kilauea the deadliest volcano active in the United States. Several homes have been destroyed recently in the Royal Gardens district with currently only one resident remaining.
   The Hawaiian volcano chain remains the most active in the world currently and is of immense  interest and research for many geologist, vulcanists, and scientist. I believe that Kilauea's lull in explosive eruptions is a great opportunity for the study of the earths mantle and crust development that can be seen and studied physically not just in theory. Being able to interact with our environment whether by hiking along its lava flows or studying it firsthand is an amazing gift we must take advantage of.
    
   



Sources:
http://hvo.wr.usgs.gov/kilauea/
http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/article.asp?ID=2820
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatches/globalpost-blogs/weird-wide-web/hawaii-travel-active-volcano-kilauea-killer-mount-st-helens
http://www.sciencecentric.com/news/11120225-lava-fingerprinting-reveals-differences-between-hawaii-twin-volcanoes.html