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Snows of Kilimanjaro Disappearing (faster rate reported)
TerraDaily ^ | 02/113/2006

Posted on 02/14/2006 9:24:36 AM PST by cogitator

Five years after warning that the famed ice fields on Tanzania 's Mount Kilimanjaro may melt, Ohio State University researchers have sadly found that their prediction is coming true.

And the impact of the loss of that ice atop Africa 's highest peak – disregarding the loss of tourism that will follow the vanishing ice – could add to the heavy drought burden already facing those living near that mountain.

For Lonnie Thompson, professor of geological sciences, his third expedition to the summit of Kilimanjaro was all too much like visiting a sick friend in failing health.

In 2002, Thompson and his colleagues shocked the scientific community with their prediction that the ice fields capping the mountain would disappear between 2015 and 2020, the victims, at least in part, of global warming. Returning to his campus office last week, he admits that nothing has happened to alter that prediction.

In fact, the mountain's ice fields may disappear sooner.

"The change there is so dramatic," he said. "We can see it both in the field and from aerial photographs of the mountaintop. I would say it is on track to disappear, and the rate of ice loss may even be accelerating.

"But we need to look at the numbers to confirm that."

The "numbers" he refers to are the combined data gathered from both the most recent and earlier expeditions, and from aerial surveys of the ice fields. By comparing these with past data, they can calculate just how much of Kilimanjaro's ice has vanished. About 82 percent of the ice fields were lost between the time they were first mapped in 1912 and 2000.

In 2002, they assessed the changes in the mountain's ice cover, comparing aerial photos from the year 2000 with those from 1962. That showed that the tops of the ice fields had lowered by at least 17 meters (nearly 56 feet) since 1962 -- an average reduction of about a half-meter in height each year.

The latest expedition added more chilling evidence:

+ At three places on the margin of the northern ice field, a 50-meter (164-foot) high wall of ice has retreated between 4.8 and 5 meters (about 16 feet) since 2002;

+ A massive hole that reaches through the ice down to the bedrock has formed in the middle of the Furtwangler glacier, as well as in the northern ice field, two of the ice bodies on the mountain. Those holes should split the Furtwangler glacier in two within the next six months; and the northern ice field in the next two years.

+ The thickness of the ice fields is waning rapidly. The northern ice field has lost 2 meters (6.5 feet) of ice from the surface, the Furtwangler has lost more than 3 meters (10 feet), and the southern ice fields have lost between 4 and 5 meters (13 and 16.5 feet).

Thompson said that the loss of more than 3 meters from the surface of the Furtwangler is serious since that entire glacier was only 9 meters thick in 2000 at their previous drill site. "There has been no accumulation of new ice forming on any of those ice fields since 2000," he said.

"That's an enormous amount of ice lost," Thompson said.

"With the new aerial photographs, we will be able to calculate for the first time, not only the area of ice loss, but also the volume of water lost, since the last photos were taken in 2000.

Tanzania's tourist trade depends in large part on international visitors. Showcased by Ernest Hemingway's short story, The Snows of Kilimanjaro, ice fields so near the equator are a major attraction, and if they melt, so too, perhaps, will most of the tourism, Thompson said.

But the impact on local water supplies is likely to be even more serious. The population living around the base of the mountain depends on meltwater flowing from the glaciers, and precipitation in the rainforests that cover its flanks to supply the springs that provide water for both drinking and irrigation.

What isn't clear, Thompson said, is the proportion of the water that comes from each source and the age of the spring and well water currently being consumed. If most comes from the rainforests, then the impact is lessened, but if glaciers provide the larger portion, the loss of the ice fields could be catastrophic.

The Ohio State team will look for answers from hundreds of water samples taken from springs and lakes in the area. Along with the same chemical tests they make on ice cores, they will also test the water for tritium, a radioactive isotope of hydrogen detectable in the water. Above-ground tests of nuclear weapons in the 1950s and 1960s dramatically increased the normal levels of tritium in water.

"If the water samples have high levels of tritium, it means that more of the spring water is younger and likely comes from the rain forest," he said.

"But if the water is low in tritium, it means that the water is older, and that more of it originated from Kilimanjaro's ice fields. And if the ice fields vanish, so might a large portion of the source of spring water." Water samples were also collected for C-14 dating in case the tritium values prove so low that the age of the water cannot be determined.

"What will happen to the water supply for these people when the glaciers disappear?" he asked, "And disappear they surely will."

Along with Thompson, other members of the field research team include Bryan Mark, assistant professor of geography; Jeffrey McKenzie, a postdoctoral fellow, and Sangsuk Lee, a Comer Fellow, both with OSU's Byrd Polar Research Center. Byrd Center researcher Henry Brecher will be preparing the maps from this season's aerial photos.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: change; climate; glaciers; ice; kilimanjaro; melting; water
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Comment #21 Removed by Moderator

To: cogitator; XJarhead

If the population is depending on the melting ice for water supply, then if the ice were to STOP melting they would be in as much trouble as if it disappeared, no?


22 posted on 02/14/2006 11:51:44 AM PST by You Dirty Rats (I Love Free Republic!)
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To: ChenangoShooter.308

Either Gillman's or Uhuru I would think.


23 posted on 02/14/2006 11:52:11 AM PST by You Dirty Rats (I Love Free Republic!)
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To: parcel_of_rogues

Snow is not the same thing as glaciers.


24 posted on 02/14/2006 12:04:45 PM PST by cogitator
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To: Hayzo
Without going into a novel, what is your opinion of how man may be affecting the climate versus natural forces?

Succintly, my opinion (hopefully based on a thorough consideration of all of the relevant informational sources) is that the human influence on global climate is increasing. This is not solely due to greenhouse gases, but that is one of the main "culprits" with respect to the current warming trend. As I noted higher up in the thread, the loss of glaciers on Kilimanjaro is a good example of a regional climate change that is strongly related to human activities -- in this case, deforestation and land-use change, with the global warming trend on top of that.

If you want more details, ask me what details you want.

25 posted on 02/14/2006 12:09:53 PM PST by cogitator
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To: Heyworth
Which in the case of Kilimanjaro only extends to 1848, when a German missionary reported it.

Thanks. Of course, dating the air in the ice bubbles with C-14 dating (C in the CO2) can also indicate the age of the ice at the glacial base.

26 posted on 02/14/2006 12:11:11 PM PST by cogitator
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To: cogitator

Is that on both of the peaks?


27 posted on 02/14/2006 12:12:09 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: ChenangoShooter.308

The last expedition got lost trying to build a bridge between the two peaks. :)

(Somehow I knew we'd get the Monty Python references in on this thread)


28 posted on 02/14/2006 12:13:05 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: parcel_of_rogues
This is a better depiction:

Kilimanjaro, the Shining Mountain

29 posted on 02/14/2006 12:22:17 PM PST by cogitator
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To: Abathar

Another desert in the making.


30 posted on 02/14/2006 12:46:29 PM PST by Dustbunny (Life is what happens while you are busy making other plans)
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To: cogitator

Best news I've ever heard. I don't care if I never see snow or temps below 70 EVER AGAIN!


31 posted on 02/14/2006 12:48:22 PM PST by Minus_The_Bear
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To: cogitator

Meanwhile, New England just got record snow falls! OMG! IT'S GLOBAL COOLING!!! AHHHH!


32 posted on 02/14/2006 1:05:34 PM PST by CodeToad
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To: Abathar

having an airport located at the base of the mountain, having thousands of
"eco-tourists" pee, poop and breath on it, and also fly hot air balloons
over it...
...and they wonder why there's a local warming event going on?

"Environmentalists"...always a contributor to environmental
degradation as long as they draw breath.


33 posted on 02/14/2006 1:09:48 PM PST by VOA
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To: cogitator
I knew all along that no good would come from this SUV fad. Now look what it's done, ice is melting on a mountain in Africa. That Honda CRV my daughter wants is now out of the question! She can get to anywhere she needs to go by donkey cart.

No wait, that's no good either. Every time a donkey farts methane is released into the earth's atmosphere. Apparently there's no way that any of us can get anywhere except by bicycle. Yeah I know, the rainforest is being destroyed by planting rubber plantations to make rubber for bike tires, but I can't be held responsible for what Michelin does can I?

34 posted on 02/14/2006 1:11:12 PM PST by epow (Life is not a choice, it's a gift.)
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To: cogitator

"Of course, dating the air in the ice bubbles with C-14 dating (C in the CO2) can also indicate the age of the ice at the glacial base."

I can't find data supporting C-14 dating at Mt. Kilimanjaro. Please provide links, unless you are just making it up...


35 posted on 02/14/2006 1:19:23 PM PST by JeffersonRepublic.com (There is no truth in the news, and no news in the truth.)
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To: JeffersonRepublic.com
SNOWS OF KILIMANJARO DISAPPEARING, GLACIAL ICE LOSS INCREASING (read near the bottom -- I just happened to find this when I searched)

I assumed that 14C measurements could be made on CO2 trapped in ice core bubbles. However, I discovered that mountain ice cores are C-14 dated using plant and organic material found in the ice core. And they also count varves (annual layers). So there are a number of ways that the full age of a glacier can be estimated.

According to Thompson et al., 2002, "Kilimanjaro Ice Core Records: Evidence of Holocene Climate Change in Tropical Africa" (Science 18 October 2002: Vol. 298. no. 5593, pp. 589 - 593), the deepest section of the Northern Ice Field on Kilimanjaro is dated at 9,360 years before 1950 AD with radiocarbon dating on "small quantities of organic samples".

36 posted on 02/14/2006 2:30:53 PM PST by cogitator
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To: cogitator

John Daly continues on the same page:
http://www.john-daly.com/press/kili-msu.gif
"The above graph is a satellite measured temperature trace from January 1979 to January 2001, for 3.75S 36.25E, the same location as Kilimanjaro itself. More importantly, the satellites record temperatures in the free atmosphere between 1,000 and 8,000 metres altitude, Kilimanjaro being at 5,900 metres, right within the measured altitude range. Not only has there been no overall warming, but the coldest month in the entire series is actually the latest one.

Clearly, if one third of the glaciers have melted off during the last dozen years as Thompson says, it has certainly not been caused by atmospheric warming. That leaves only the sun, the obvious candidate anyway, and only ideological commitment to the UN-IPCC policies could blame man for what is obviously a natural process."

---I for one am just releived that glaciers from the last ice age are finally receding. When glaciers in the tropics start growing then I'll worry.


37 posted on 02/14/2006 3:55:44 PM PST by parcel_of_rogues
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To: parcel_of_rogues
"The above graph is a satellite measured temperature trace from January 1979 to January 2001,

That analysis of MSU lower tropospheric temperatures has subsequently been shown to have substantial errors (much of this occurred after Mr. Daly's decease). All analyses of lower troposphere temperatures now show warming. There is less warming in the tropics compared to the middle and high latitudes, however. Nonetheless, the main cause of the decline of the Kilimanjaro glaciers is due to a decrease in the moisture supply, primarily caused by lower-slope deforestation.

38 posted on 02/15/2006 7:02:45 AM PST by cogitator
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