Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

‘Warm’ Ice in the World’s Highest Glacier

Ice temperatures inside the world’s highest glacier on the slopes of Mount Everest are warmer than expected, making it especially vulnerable to future climate change, warn glaciologists. In 2017, the EverDrill project research team led by Dr. Duncan Quincey from the University of Leeds became the first to successfully drill into Khumbu Glacier in Nepal and record temperatures deep below the surface layer.

The resulting measurement and analysis, published this week in Scientific Reports, revealed a minimum ice temperature of only −3.3°C, with even the coldest ice being a full 2°C warmer than the mean annual air temperature. These results indicate that high-elevation Himalayan glaciers are vulnerable to even minor atmospheric warming and will be especially sensitive to future climate warming.

Measuring the temperature range

Study co-author, Dr. Quincey from the School of Geography at Leeds, said:

Study lead author Katie Miles from Aberystwyth University explained that the Khumbu Glacier’s vulnerability may have serious consequences for the lifespan and amount of meltwater runoff in the coming decades, and it will be important to determine if other glaciers in the region have similar internal characteristics to Khumbu.

EverDrill expedition 2017. (Image: Evan Miles)

Adapting a car wash unit

Working at heights of up to 5,200 meters on the Khumbu Glacier, the research team used a specially adapted car wash unit that produced a pressurized jet of hot water to drill boreholes as deep as 190 meters into the glacial ice. Strings of temperature sensors were installed into these boreholes and left to collect data for several months. Dr. Quincey said:

The expedition team traveled to Khumbu Glacier, Nepal, in 2017 and 2018 and included Dr. Quincy, Dr. Evan Miles, now based at the Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL, Switzerland, Professor Bryn Hubbard and Katie Miles, both from Aberystwyth University, and scientists from Kathmandu and Sheffield universities.

Dr. Quincey is the EverDrill project leader and oversaw the remote sensing aspect of the project, and drilling was led by Professor Bryn Hubbard. The paper Polythermal structure of a Himalayan debris-covered glacier revealed by borehole thermometry is published in Scientific Reports.

Provided by: University of Leeds [Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.]

Like this article? Subscribe to our weekly email for more!     

The post ‘Warm’ Ice in the World’s Highest Glacier appeared first on Vision Times.



This post first appeared on Vision Times, please read the originial post: here

Share the post

‘Warm’ Ice in the World’s Highest Glacier

×

Subscribe to Vision Times

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×