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Glaciers in East Antarctica also 'imperiled' by climate change, UCI researchers find by Staff Writers Irvine CA (SPX) Jul 30, 2018
A team of scientists from the University of California, Irvine has found evidence of significant mass loss in East Antarctica's Totten and Moscow University glaciers, which, if they fully collapsed, could add 5 meters (16.4 feet) to the global sea level. In a paper published this week in the American Geophysical Union journal Geophysical Research Letters, the glaciologists estimate that between April 2002 and September 2016, the two glaciers lost about 18.5 billion tons of ice per year - equivalent to 0.7 millimeters (0.03 inches) of global sea level rise over the analyzed time period. UCI's researchers discovered this by applying a locally optimized technique to data from NASA's Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment satellite mission, combined with mass balance approximations from regional atmospheric climate models and ice discharge measurements by NASA's Operation IceBridge and Measures projects. "For this research, we used an improved methodology with GRACE data to retrieve the mass loss in an area undergoing rapid change," said lead author Yara Mohajerani, a graduate student in UCI's Department of Earth System Science. "By overlaying these data with independent measurements, we improve our confidence in the results and the conclusion that Totten and Moscow University are imperiled." Making up roughly two-thirds of the Antarctic continent, East Antarctica has been viewed by polar researchers as less threatened by climate change than the volatile ice sheets in West Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula. "Both of these glaciers are vulnerable to the intrusion of warm ocean water and hold considerable potential for sea level rise," said co-author Eric Rignot, Donald Bren Professor and chair of Earth system science at UCI. "This work highlights that East Antarctic glaciers are as important to our future as those in the continent's western regions." According to co-author Isabella Velicogna, professor of Earth system science, it's challenging to study the Totten and Moscow University glaciers because the signal of change is much weaker than that of their counterparts in the west. "In this remote part of the world, the data from GRACE and other satellite missions are critical for us to understand the glacier evolution," she said.
Kelp's record journey exposes Antarctic ecosystems to change Sydney, Australia (SPX) Jul 20, 2018 When Chilean researcher Dr Erasmo Macaya from Universidad de Concepcion and Centro IDEAL stumbled upon foreign kelp washed up on an Antarctic beach, he knew he had found something significant. New research reported in Nature Climate Change by an international, multidisciplinary team of scientists reveals just how important that finding was. The team discovered the kelp had drifted 20,000km to reach that shore - making it the longest known biological rafting event ever recorded. To get there, ... read more
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