Australian Scientists Call For Ocean Network Probe
AUSTRALIA: August 20, 2007
SYDNEY - Australian scientists want to string a vast array of probes across
the oceans of the southern hemisphere to warn of changes in ocean
circulation that may affect the global climate.
The senior science adviser to the UN-backed World Climate Research Programme
on Friday called for the establishment of a network of deep ocean moorings
to extend a system already in operation in the northern hemisphere.
Instruments could be strung across the South Atlantic and through the
Indonesian archipelago, as well as in the Southern Ocean where special
designs would be necessary, said John Church of the government-backed
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.
A North Atlantic moored network of scientific instruments already provides
measurements of the northern "overturning circulation" conveyor belt of
ocean currents, which forms a giant loop from the Gulf of Mexico to Iceland
and back.
"The establishment of such a system in the southern hemisphere is critical
to providing the additional data ocean scientists need to more accurately
monitor any shifts in the global ocean circulation that influence world
climate," Church said.
After a year of observation, a team of international scientists this week
reported that the conveyor belt circulation system may vary widely over 12
months, but there was not yet enough data to tell whether global warming was
having an impact.
Church told Reuters that the establishment of monitors in the oceans of the
southern hemisphere would require international co-ordination and would cost
"tens of millions" of dollars to establish.
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
|