| Arctic Melting Shows Global Warming Serious - Expert
CANADA: September 4, 2008
OTTAWA - The incredibly rapid rate at which Canada's Arctic ice shelves are
disappearing is an early indicator of the "very substantial changes" that
global warming will impose on all mankind, a top scientist said on
Wednesday.
Researchers announced late on Tuesday that the five ice shelves along
Ellesmere Island in the Far North, which are more than 4,000 years old, had
shrunk by 23 percent this summer alone.
The largest shelf is disintegrating and one of the smaller shelves, covering
19 square miles (55 square km), broke away entirely last month.
"Climate models indicate that the greatest changes, the most severe changes,
will happen earliest in the highest northern latitudes," said Warwick
Vincent, director of the Centre for Northern Studies at Laval University in
Quebec.
"This will be the starting point for more substantial changes throughout the
rest of the planet.... Our indicators are showing us exactly what the
climate models predict," he told Reuters in an interview.
Global warming is forecast to generate more damaging weather extremes such
as hurricanes, cyclones and floods.
Vincent, who has visited the ice shelves along Ellesmere Island every year
for the past 10 years, said the impact of higher temperatures this year was
"staggering".
His team had estimated that the shelves would lose eight square miles this
summer. The true figure was 83 square miles.
"What was extraordinary was just the vast quantity of open water ... you
could see open water to the horizon in an area that is typically ice-covered
throughout the season," he said.
The Markham Ice Shelf split away from Ellesmere Island in early August. Two
large chunks totaling 47 square miles have broken off the nearby Serson Ice
Shelf, reducing it in size by 60 percent.
The Ward Hunt Ice Shelf, at 155 square miles the largest of the remaining
four shelves, is disintegrating.
"Clearly the long-term viability of that ice shelf is now actually
short-term," said Vincent.
The peak temperature the team recorded was 67.5 degrees Fahrenheit (19.7
degrees Celsius), far above the average of 46 degrees Fahrenheit.
Vincent said he had no doubt that global warming was caused in part by human
activity.
"I think we're at a point where it is not stoppable but it can be slowed
down. And if you think about the magnitude of effects on our society, then
we really need to buy ourselves more time to get ready for some very
substantial changes that are ahead," he said.
Ellesmere Island was once home to a single enormous ice shelf totaling
around 3,500 square miles. All that is left today are the four much smaller
shelves that together cover little more than 300 square miles.
Scientists say the shelves, which contain unique microscopic ecosystems that
have not yet been studied, will not be replaced because they took so long to
form.
"More and more, we're realizing that it is microscopic life that really
dominates the biodiversity of planet Earth ... we really need to understand
what that biodiversity is," said Vincent. (Reporting by David Ljunggren;
editing by Rob Wilson)
Story by David Ljunggren
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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