Saturday 20 June 2015

Rapid climate change in Alaska

Alaska’s Heat Wave Ignites Fires as Glaciers Rapidly Melt


19 June, 2015


Climate change has caused Alaska’s glaciers to melt so quickly that a one-foot thick layer ofwater could completely cover the entire state of Alaska every seven years, according to a new study.

Photo Credit: NASA Earth Observatory (via Discover Magazine) You can see how much ice has melted into the oceans in just three decades with NASA’s satellite imagery of Alaska’s fast-moving tidewater Columbia Glacier from 1984-2014.Photo Credit: NASA Earth Observatory / GIF viaDiscover Magazine


Alaskan glaciers have lost 75 billion metric tons of ice every year from 1994 through 2013, The Washington Posts Chris Mooney reported from the study, which was recently accepted for publication in the peer-reviewed Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union. Mooney also reported that the Columbia Glacier (see GIF above) alone has been sending 4 billion metric tons of water into the oceans every year.

Alaska’s melting glaciers are “punching far above their weight” when it comes to contributing to sea level rise, CBS News‘s Michael Casey pointed out, referring to how Alaska only holds one percent of the Earth’s glacial ice volume, with most of the Earth’s ice found in Antarctica and Greenland’s ice sheets.

But as the authors of the new study explained, “Despite Greenland’s ice covered area being 20 times greater than that of Alaska, losses in Alaska were fully one third of the total loss from the ice sheet during 2005-2010.”

For the study, a University of Alaska Fairbanks and U.S. Geological Survey research team analyzed surveys of 116 glaciers in the Alaska region across 19 years to estimate ice loss from melting and iceberg calving, according to a news release.

Thinking about the future, it means that rates of loss from Alaska are unlikely to decline, since surface melt is the predominant driver, and summer temperatures are expected to continue to increase,” said Chris Larsen, a research associate professor with the Geophysical Institute at the University of Alaska Fairbanks and lead author of the study.

There is a lot of momentum in the system, and Alaska will continue to be a major driver of global sea level change in upcoming decades,” he added.
#AGUnews: Alaska glaciers make large contributions to global sea level risehttp://t.co/miA5Ubsl19 pic.twitter.com/3QQxpXZeSF
Am Geophysical Union (@theAGU) June 17, 2015

Not only are Alaska’s glaciers melting, the northernmost U.S. state experienced record heat at the end of May where parts of Alaska recorded temperatures higher than in Arizona.

Unseasonably high temperatures, unpredictable winds and low humidity have been the perfect storm for wildfires to break out in the state, which recorded its warmest May ever. Some of the major blazes have threatened hundreds of homes and forced numerous evacuations, theAssociated Press reported. As of Thursday morning, a total of 56 fires were actively burningaround the state.
What you need to know about the Sockeye Fire: evacuation, pets, travel, how to helphttp://t.co/kZx6v2G19S pic.twitter.com/3FP74XvKw9
Alaska Dispatch News (@adndotcom) June 15, 2015
It’s in the 80s right now, and we usually don’t get that kind of weather,” Casey Cook, the emergency manager for the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, told the news organization. “So all those combine to make it a very heavy fire fuel area.”  
#Alaska Drivers on ParksHwy headed towards #SockeyeFire are being asked to turn around:http://t.co/f10kMJFcXB #KTVA pic.twitter.com/RGONW2BWAf — KTVA 11 News (@ktva)June 16, 2015
Area burned by #SockeyeFire is home to many kennels; hundreds of sled dogs are displacedhttp://t.co/Si7vTZnHyE pic.twitter.com/NzEwZaFMEG
Alaska Dispatch News (@adndotcom) June 15, 2015

The above average temperatures this spring are a continuation of an incredibly mild winter with record low snowfall forcing the Iditarod dog sled race in Anchorage to move north 300 miles to Fairbanks. Additionally, a ski resort outside of Juneau had to close because of low snowfall and warm temperatures that inhibited snow-making.



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