The Prague Post - 'Extremely exciting': the ice cores that could help save glaciers

EUR -
AED 4.230515
AFN 72.001364
ALL 94.774672
AMD 424.399326
ANG 2.062509
AOA 1057.484117
ARS 1644.255851
AUD 1.648224
AWG 2.076378
AZN 1.954124
BAM 1.952797
BBD 2.318934
BDT 141.62038
BGN 1.923653
BHD 0.434532
BIF 3431.907717
BMD 1.151944
BND 1.483525
BOB 7.955766
BRL 5.941033
BSD 1.15133
BTN 110.195548
BWP 15.626039
BYN 3.177855
BYR 22578.094726
BZD 2.315639
CAD 1.613406
CDF 2621.823117
CHF 0.921901
CLF 0.02663
CLP 1048.083972
CNY 7.801826
CNH 7.809723
COP 4059.241926
CRC 525.591776
CUC 1.151944
CUP 30.526506
CVE 110.09427
CZK 24.196864
DJF 205.024725
DKK 7.474329
DOP 67.466254
DZD 153.72109
EGP 59.904755
ERN 17.279154
ETB 181.420922
FJD 2.565037
FKP 0.860385
GBP 0.86409
GEL 3.053128
GGP 0.860385
GHS 12.83726
GIP 0.860385
GMD 84.09173
GNF 10085.359997
GTQ 8.776466
GYD 240.809697
HKD 9.027724
HNL 30.780534
HRK 7.535781
HTG 150.488587
HUF 355.423563
IDR 20711.94608
ILS 3.414027
IMP 0.860385
INR 110.365931
IQD 1508.280654
IRR 1584124.051652
ISK 143.820388
JEP 0.860385
JMD 182.159885
JOD 0.816726
JPY 184.878308
KES 149.349496
KGS 100.737644
KHR 4636.889788
KMF 491.880388
KPW 1036.582502
KRW 1764.847252
KWD 0.355608
KYD 0.959529
KZT 562.315304
LAK 25346.024365
LBP 103104.951232
LKR 383.686658
LRD 209.550494
LSL 19.01819
LTL 3.40139
LVL 0.696799
LYD 7.354595
MAD 10.679838
MDL 20.045263
MGA 4832.568758
MKD 61.642417
MMK 2418.66985
MNT 4122.598946
MOP 9.293868
MRU 45.640223
MUR 55.339352
MVR 17.809344
MWK 1996.529853
MXN 20.034897
MYR 4.685303
MZN 73.600039
NAD 19.018272
NGN 1568.719231
NIO 42.374288
NOK 10.976634
NPR 176.315169
NZD 1.993893
OMR 0.442937
PAB 1.15133
PEN 3.916926
PGK 5.040184
PHP 70.705158
PKR 320.393836
PLN 4.256841
PYG 7073.062057
QAR 4.197545
RON 5.23996
RSD 117.351953
RUB 82.912959
RWF 1690.807314
SAR 4.325183
SBD 9.268046
SCR 15.744218
SDG 691.742169
SEK 10.999881
SGD 1.484636
SHP 0.860042
SLE 28.395006
SLL 24155.683922
SOS 657.991036
SRD 43.010695
STD 23842.90693
STN 24.462383
SVC 10.074377
SYP 127.326743
SZL 19.013679
THB 38.014218
TJS 10.73663
TMT 4.043322
TND 3.380502
TOP 2.773604
TRY 53.168299
TTD 7.823969
TWD 36.454982
TZS 3018.089911
UAH 51.737368
UGX 4340.288081
USD 1.151944
UYU 46.507877
UZS 13827.556736
VES 653.121148
VND 30326.643408
VUV 137.78589
WST 3.163103
XAF 654.952695
XAG 0.01796
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.113185
XCG 2.075009
XDR 0.814223
XOF 654.941341
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.911251
ZAR 19.027056
ZMK 10368.878422
ZMW 19.889415
ZWL 370.925372
  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    16.43

    -0.37%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.3

    0%

  • AZN

    2.3320

    181.292

    +1.29%

  • GSK

    1.2850

    52.455

    +2.45%

  • BCE

    -0.2650

    24.445

    -1.08%

  • BP

    0.5950

    43.545

    +1.37%

  • VOD

    0.0550

    15.105

    +0.36%

  • RIO

    2.2150

    101.275

    +2.19%

  • NGG

    0.6110

    80.991

    +0.75%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.72

    0%

  • BTI

    0.0650

    61.185

    +0.11%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    12.72

    -1.1%

  • CMSD

    -0.0010

    22.289

    -0%

  • RELX

    -0.9950

    32.985

    -3.02%

  • BCC

    -0.6400

    67.67

    -0.95%

'Extremely exciting': the ice cores that could help save glaciers
'Extremely exciting': the ice cores that could help save glaciers / Photo: GREG BAKER - AFP

'Extremely exciting': the ice cores that could help save glaciers

Dressed in an orange puffer jacket, Japanese scientist Yoshinori Iizuka stepped into a storage freezer to retrieve an ice core he hopes will help experts protect the world's disappearing glaciers.

Text size:

The fist-sized sample drilled from a mountaintop is part of an ambitious international effort to understand why glaciers in Tajikistan have resisted the rapid melting seen almost everywhere else.

"If we could learn the mechanism behind the increased volume of ice there, then we may be able to apply that to all the other glaciers around the world," potentially even helping revive them, said Iizuka, a professor at Hokkaido University.

"That may be too ambitious a statement. But I hope our study will ultimately help people," he said.

Thousands of glaciers will vanish each year in the coming decades, leaving only a fraction standing by the end of the century unless global warming is curbed, a study published in the journal Nature Climate Change showed Monday.

Earlier this year, AFP exclusively accompanied Iizuka and other scientists through harsh conditions to a site at an altitude of 5,810 metres (about 19,000 feet) on the Kon-Chukurbashi ice cap in the Pamir Mountains.

The area is the only mountainous region on the planet where glaciers have not only resisted melting, but even slightly grown, a phenomenon called the "Pamir-Karakoram anomaly".

The team drilled two ice columns approximately 105 metres (328 feet) long out of the glacier.

One is being stored in an underground sanctuary in Antarctica belonging to the Ice Memory Foundation, which supported the Tajikistan expedition along with the Swiss Polar Institute.

The other was shipped to Iizuka's facility, the Institute of Low Temperature Science at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, where the team is hunting clues on why precipitation in the region increased over the last century, and how the glacier has resisted melting.

Some link the anomaly to the area's cold climate or even increased use of agricultural water in Pakistan that creates more vapour.

But the ice cores are the first opportunity to examine the anomaly scientifically.

- 'Ancient ice' -

"Information from the past is crucial," said Iizuka.

"By understanding the causes behind the continuous build-up of snow from the past to the present, we can clarify what will happen going forward and why the ice has grown."

Since the samples arrived in November, his team has worked in freezing storage facilities to log the density, alignment of snow grains, and the structure of ice layers.

In December, when AFP visited, the scientists were kitted out like polar explorers to cut and shave ice samples in the comparatively balmy minus 20C of their lab.

The samples can tell stories about weather conditions going back decades, or even centuries.

A layer of clear ice indicates a warm period when the glacier melted and then refroze, while a low-density layer suggests packed snow, rather than ice, which can help estimate precipitation.

Brittle samples with cracks, meanwhile, indicate snowfall on half-melted layers that then refroze.

And other clues can reveal more information -- volcanic materials like sulfate ions can serve as time markers, while water isotopes can reveal temperatures.

The scientists hope that the samples contain material dating back 10,000 years or more, though much of the glacier melted during a warm spell around 6,000 years ago.

Ancient ice would help scientists answer questions such as "what kind of snow was falling in this region 10,000 years ago? What was in it?" Iizuka said.

"We can study how many and what kinds of fine particles were suspended in the atmosphere during that ice age," he added.

"I really hope there is ancient ice."

- Secrets in the ice -

For now, the work proceeds slowly and carefully, with team members like graduate student Sora Yaginuma carefully slicing samples apart.

"An ice core is an extremely valuable sample and unique," said Yaginuma.

"From that single ice core, we perform a variety of analyses, both chemical and physical."

The team hopes to publish its first findings next year and will be doing "lots of trial-and-error" work to reconstruct past climate conditions, Iizuka said.

The analysis in Hokkaido will uncover only some of what the ice has to share, and with the other samples preserved in Antarctica, there will be opportunities for more research.

For example, he said, scientists could look for clues about how mining in the region historically affected the area's air quality, temperature and precipitation.

"We can learn how the Earth's environment has changed in response to human activities," Iizuka said.

With so many secrets yet to learn, the work is "extremely exciting," he added.

O.Holub--TPP