May
16, 2007
PERMANENT
ICE FIELDS ARE RESISTING GLOBAL
WARMING
The small ice caps
of Mont Blanc and
the Dôme du Goûter are not melting, or at
least, not yet. This is what CNRS researchers1 have announced in the Journal
of Geophysical Research. At very high altitudes (above 4200
meters), the
accumulation of snow and ice has varied very little since the beginning
of the
20th century. But if summer temperatures increase by a few degrees
during the
21st century, the melt could become more marked, and could affect the
"permanent" ice fields.
Alpine glaciers,
which are mainly
at an altitude between 2000 and 4000 meters, shrank considerably during
the
20th century and particularly during the past twenty years, losing an
average
of 1 to 1.5 kilometers in length. However, the situation is different
above
4200 meters.
At the altitude of
the Dôme du
Goûter (4300 m) or the summit of Mont
Blanc
(4810 m), all precipitation is solid, falling as snow. The ice fields
melt very
little, and only in extreme conditions such as the 2003 heatwave.
Variations in
the mass of glaciers only depend on the accumulation of snow and the
downward
flow of the glacier, as the ice is deformed under its own weight.
In order to study
these mass
balance fluctuations, the research team measured the rate of
accumulation of
snow on the Dôme du Goûter since 1993, and the
thickness and flow rate of the
glacier. They also used meteorological data from Chamonix,
from 1923 to the present day, to calculate the rate of accumulation of
ice
during the 20th century. Or, more precisely, they used data on the
precipitation in Chamonix,
altitude 1036
meters, to extrapolate for quantities of snow fallen on the glacier,
and so to
calculate the mass balance.
Based on this data,
the
glaciologists have shown that at these very high altitudes, the ice
mass
balance has remained almost constant over the last 100 years. They have
also
used old topographical maps to show that the thickness of these small
ice caps
on Mont Blanc and
the nearby Dôme du Goûter
has only changed by a few meters from 1905 to 2005. By comparison, at a
lower
altitude (1800 meters), the thickness of the Mer de Glace has decreased
by 120
meters over the same period.
So the Mont Blanc and Dôme du
Goûter ice fields have not yet been affected by
climate change. However, during exceptional climatic events like the
2003
heatwave, positive temperatures caused some of the surface ice to melt.
If
episodes like this were to occur more often, this partial melting would
no
longer be negligible, and would have a significant effect on the ice
mass. So
there is no guarantee that "permanent" ice fields will stay that way
in the future.
##
Contact:
Aimee
Bartosik
CNRS
aimee.bartosik@cnrs-dir.fr
This
text derived from:
http://www.cnrs.fr/index.html
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