Geologists Marvel at Alaska Glacier's Rare 'Surge' -- Up to 60 Feet a Day (sfgate.com) 94
The hills of ice at the base of Alaska's Muldrow Glacier "have sat undisturbed and covered by tundra for more than 60 years," reports the Washington Post, adding that in normal years the glacier only moves about three inches a day.
But that's suddenly changed, and they're now moving between 360 and 720 inches a day (that is, 30 to 60 feet, every day). The rare phenomenon began last fall some 12 miles uphill. That's where the glacier initially started sliding, its smooth surface ice cracking under tremendous, hidden stresses. New crevasses opened and ice cliffs were pushed up in a chaotic jumble. The first witness was a pilot who spied the scene in March as he flew around the north side of Denali, the continent's tallest mountain.
The Muldrow has been "surging" forward ever since, at speeds up to 100 times faster than normal....
Surges are one of the last mysteries for those who study glaciers, in part because they happen so infrequently and in just a fraction of places around the world. The activity is different from a glacier actually growing in size, and it can take decades for the right conditions to develop.... The prevailing theory of surges is that the natural advance of a glacier causes friction, which melts the deepest ice. Loose gravel traps the meltwater underneath. But as snow and ice accumulate in the glacier's higher elevations, the mass there gets top heavy. A surge redistributes that mass to lower elevations, with the meltwater serving as a lubricant that helps the glacier pick up speed as it slides downhill.
This last happened with the Muldrow during the winter and spring of 1956-57. Given its record of surges roughly every 50 years, scientists had long anticipated the current event. Their concern is that a warming climate could spell disaster for future surges. "You wonder, 'Are you going to ever be able to see the surge again?' " said Chad Hults, regional geologist for Alaska's national parks. "I don't know, because 50 years from now, you might lose enough glacier ice that even if it surges... you might not actually even be able to see any difference."
For most of the glaciologists and geologists tracking today's surge, it's a once-in-a-lifetime thrill.
The article also reminds readers that "across the Alaska Range, glaciers are losing mass because of climate change."
But that's suddenly changed, and they're now moving between 360 and 720 inches a day (that is, 30 to 60 feet, every day). The rare phenomenon began last fall some 12 miles uphill. That's where the glacier initially started sliding, its smooth surface ice cracking under tremendous, hidden stresses. New crevasses opened and ice cliffs were pushed up in a chaotic jumble. The first witness was a pilot who spied the scene in March as he flew around the north side of Denali, the continent's tallest mountain.
The Muldrow has been "surging" forward ever since, at speeds up to 100 times faster than normal....
Surges are one of the last mysteries for those who study glaciers, in part because they happen so infrequently and in just a fraction of places around the world. The activity is different from a glacier actually growing in size, and it can take decades for the right conditions to develop.... The prevailing theory of surges is that the natural advance of a glacier causes friction, which melts the deepest ice. Loose gravel traps the meltwater underneath. But as snow and ice accumulate in the glacier's higher elevations, the mass there gets top heavy. A surge redistributes that mass to lower elevations, with the meltwater serving as a lubricant that helps the glacier pick up speed as it slides downhill.
This last happened with the Muldrow during the winter and spring of 1956-57. Given its record of surges roughly every 50 years, scientists had long anticipated the current event. Their concern is that a warming climate could spell disaster for future surges. "You wonder, 'Are you going to ever be able to see the surge again?' " said Chad Hults, regional geologist for Alaska's national parks. "I don't know, because 50 years from now, you might lose enough glacier ice that even if it surges... you might not actually even be able to see any difference."
For most of the glaciologists and geologists tracking today's surge, it's a once-in-a-lifetime thrill.
The article also reminds readers that "across the Alaska Range, glaciers are losing mass because of climate change."
No pain, no gain. (Score:2)
The article also reminds readers that "across the Alaska Range, glaciers are losing mass because of climate change."
With the drought [youtu.be] something else will be losing "mass" due to climate change.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: Because Democrats (Re:No pain, no gain.) (Score:2)
Right because building nuclear power plants on fault lines sounds like a great idea. Let's build one near berverally hills. That way when it goes boom the whole issue gets solved.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Where is Texas desalination? They run dry every 5 years or so.
Here we go. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:1)
No one has any idea how to stop the rapture.
Just pick a different fairytale.
EZY PEEZY
I also marvel. (Score:3, Informative)
I marvel that there's a lot of talk about the problem but so little about solutions.
Can we get some more nuclear power plants now? No? Okay then, we will just let the planet warm until people are serious about solutions.
How about now? Can we have some more nuclear power plants now? Still no? Okay, let me know when you want solutions, nuclear power will still be there when you get serious.
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
If we've already reached the tipping point then nuclear isn't going to save us. We need to evacuate to Mars immediately.
Re: (Score:1)
If we've already reached the tipping point then nuclear isn't going to save us. We need to evacuate to Mars immediately.
You must mean: "Get your ass to Mars", right?
Re: (Score:2)
You simply refuse to acknowledge the memo that renewables are the cheapest and safest source of energy today, do you?
Re: (Score:2)
Cheapest? Maybe.
Safest? Perhaps not.
Per TWh, nuclear is pretty dang low.
Nuclear can be grouped in with solar and wind at the lower end of deaths per TWh.
Coal is, by all studies, just horribly bad when it comes for deaths per TWh. Ditto oil.
Then depending on the study, it's usually natural gas that's next in line for the most deaths, followed by rooftop solar and hydroelectric.
Re: (Score:2)
Are they reliable? Seems to me that solar power has a problem with the sun setting. The wind doesn't always blow. The rain doesn't always fall.
Are they plentiful? Not everywhere is suited for renewable energy. We should use it where the costs are low but that low cost is dependent on geography and climate.
There may be enough land area per person, and enough diversity in climate, in large nations like the USA, Canada, Russia, Australia, and a few more for energy from the wind, water, and sun to meet the
Re: (Score:2)
Why would that be so hard if renewables are cheaper than coal, natural gas, and nuclear? Why? Maybe because renewables aren't as low in cost as the claims? Maybe because renewable energy still needs some kind of backup power for when the sun does not shine and the wind does not blow?
Nothing is stopping adoption of wind and solar power but the cost. What is stopping nuclear power are lies, FUD, and NIMBYism.
Re: (Score:3)
There are plenty of solutions. Get on with tapping that massive offshore wind capacity for a start. Way cheaper than nuclear and much less vulnerable to NIMBY lawsuits.
At the very least we need to get all the low hanging fruit before looking at the really expensive, contentious options.
Re: (Score:3)
I marvel at how many nuclear shills there are on Slashdot so many years after it has been proven that they are unsustainable and unaffordable.
Shills everywhere (Re:I also marvel.) (Score:2)
There are no shills for solar and offshore wind power on Slashdot?
Re: (Score:2)
Only because liberals wrecked them by either mis-operating them, deliberately, or, by destroying them in the USA. They ruin everything they touch.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I marvel that there's a lot of talk about the problem but so little about solutions.
Can we get some more nuclear power plants now? No? Okay then, we will just let the planet warm until people are serious about solutions.
How about now? Can we have some more nuclear power plants now? Still no? Okay, let me know when you want solutions, nuclear power will still be there when you get serious.
Global warming Here in Montreal, for June 5-8, we have had 32C to 36C daily. Normally we get this temperature near the third week of July. Its about 1 month early. Winter is also much milder, we used a lot less fuel to heat our home this year, compared to the best of the previous 10 winters.
Only three choices (Re:I also marvel.) (Score:2)
That sounds like AGW has been beneficial to you.
Global warming is not a universal bad, some people will come out ahead. Some people won't even notice. Is anyone in the tropics concerned about AGW? Seems to me that no matter what it's still going to be quite warm and rainy. Sounds good for cheap energy from wind, water, and sun.
What does this mean for nations like USA, UK, Japan, Germany, France, China, and so many more? It means a need to build nuclear power plants because energy from wind, water, and
Ha ha (Score:1, Troll)
"The article also reminds readers that "across the Alaska Range, glaciers are losing mass because of climate change."
Be sure not to change the narrative!
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
What narrative? The science doesn’t lie. Feel free to run your own simulation if you feel the scientific community is wrong. Here it is in terms you can understand. https://xkcd.com/1732/ [xkcd.com]
Re: (Score:3)
There's always that guy. The glacier is surging. That's a fact.
Re: (Score:2)
The glacier is surging.
I get the distinct impression you have no idea what that means.
Re: (Score:2)
The glacier is surging.
I get the distinct impression you have no idea what that means.
You seem to want to imply you have some knowledge, but you couldn't think of anything to say. So you attack a person who did say something.
It's OK that you don't understand. You're either curious, or you're not. No need to pretend.
Re: (Score:1)
You seem to want to imply you have some knowledge, but you couldn't think of anything to say. So you attack a person who did say something.
That's a stupid conclusion to come to.
Let me explain why. I'll use small words for you.
Individual in question used that fact as evidence that his prior implied claim was true- that a "surging" glacier was evidence against climate change.
This indicates that the individual in question does not understand what a surge is.
Since you are likely equally as fucking clueless, as indicated from your post, I'll explain it to you.
Again, I'll try to use small words.
A glacier surges when there is an decrease in
Re: (Score:2)
The article, and even the synopsis posted above say the glacier surge is normal and cyclical, and that the effects of global climate change may in fact cause the surge to stop or be undetectable.
So what are your implications regarding the "fact" that the glacier is surging?
Did you perhaps read neither the story nor the post synopsis and jump straight to the comments for an argument?
Re: (Score:2)
So that's where my lost laxative went.
Re: (Score:1)
First, stop digging (Re:Ha ha) (Score:2, Interesting)
If you find yourself in a hole you need to first stop digging.
That means finding energy sources that are affordable and low in CO2 emissions. Those are onshore wind, hydro, geothermal, nuclear fission, and some natural gas during the transition.
Then capture the CO2. There's basalt based cement and agricultural lime. Carbon neutral fuel synthesis technology can be used to make carbon negative asphalt.
People calling for more expansive solar and offshore wind are unserious people. You can't stop digging a
Re: (Score:2)
You heard it here, folks. We can solve the climate crisis by building roads!
Re: (Score:2)
Building roads from carbon negative asphalt will be insufficient if we don't also stop digging a deeper hole on CO2 emissions.
We will need roads, right? Okay then, build them out of carbon negative cement and asphalt.
We need both. We need to both stop emitting CO2 and to sequester CO2 that was emitted in the past. That means stop digging by using energy from onshore wind, geothermal, hydro, and nuclear fission. It means carbon negative cement and asphalt also.
I'm sure a lot of people will be disturbed b
Re: (Score:3)
Why is offshore wind "unserious"? It's already cheaper than nuclear and coal and will overtake gas in the next few years. There is a massive amount of it just waiting to be tapped in shallow waters, and as the price falls deep waters will open up as well.
It would be madness not to use those vast resources. For example, in the UK there is around 20x as much offshore wind energy in shallow waters as the country consumes (as electricity). 95% of it could be exported, or massive amounts of fossil fuel use (like
Re: (Score:2)
Why is offshore wind "unserious"?
Because no one will pay MacMann to promote it.
Nobody spends so much time on so many obvious falsehoods for no money.
Re: (Score:3)
I was wondering if he was the new Blindseer puppet. Normally he posts in the first few seconds of any story about energy, with some copy/pasted shilling for nuclear. Lately MacMann seems to have taken over his job.
Re: (Score:3)
I presume both are puppets of the same account. The writing style is sufficiently similar to link them, though.
The only question is whether they're puppets of someone who just wants to watch the world burn, or someone getting paid by someone who just wants to watch the world burn.
Re:Ha ha (Score:4, Interesting)
Also, I'm not generally a great fan of alarmist behavior. We with either live or die, it's not that important. On a cosmic scale, it's pretty safe to suggest that even if humanity lasts a few billion years, that number is utterly insignificant and as such, it's really just a now or later thing. Of course, I'd like to live a bit longer, so I'll listen to clearly sound science that isn't issued by governments or lobbyists. Doomsday predictions tend to make new because national leaders tend to be too busy to listen to "we have a problem that if we don't do anything, then in 200 years, earth will be uninhabitable". So, all we generally hear about is the tomorrow predictions. This doesn't mean there isn't a problem, it simply means that we're generally only exposed to alarmist nonsense.
Evolution (you do hopefully believe in this... or maybe are at least open to it?) suggests that we'll generally survive based on our adaptability to our environment. Of course, this could me we learn how to make fire to stay warm. Or how to swim so we don't drown. And it can be biological, but adaptation is key to human survival. When we see problems, we adapt to them.
If we completely ignore all political aspects of global warming and focus on what is most important in this world. Coffee (and maybe bananas), these are two crops which require specific climates to grow in specific air pressure (I think it's the air pressure) conditions. These are currently not doing so well. Coffee growers are burdened by a higher demand than ever... and this could be my fault as I finally make enough coffee to allow me to drink as much as I'd like. Though, in reality, we use A LOT of coffee and the regions capable of growing it are at maximum capacity without some really cool tech to help. And there's also the issue that the land where we can grow coffee has risen in temperature. This is threatening the quality of the harvested crops and risking being unable to grow coffee at all in the future. Coffee is a clear example of climate endangered crops. We can clearly see the impact of climate change on these crops.
As we watch our precious, beautiful, glorious coffee come under threat (I'm already considering vacuum packing a metric ton of it for personal use) other agriculture and animals depending on the environment are becoming risked. And I suppose natural selection says, this is fine and as it should be. Adapt or die.
But this is 2021, we don't need to sit back and just let the changes take us. We can fight back.
There was never a point in history where oil or coal was a good idea. They were profitable and convenient. And frankly, if not for oil and coal, we likely would not have advanced nearly as far as we have in the past hundred or two years. It came at a cost.
I personally am a smoker (goes with the coffee addiction) and I see things that the non-smokers don't. We've made a difference... and it's making my life a living hell, but I'm hopeful for my kids.
I can't light a cigarette anywhere without catching hell from everyone anywhere.
When I was a kid, you could be sitting in your living room with the windows closed smoking a stinky cigar and no one noticed... or at least it wasn't a big deal and this was because everything smelled like shit all the time. Dad's old lime green Ford Pinto dumped 2/3s of the fuel it was fed on the road as it was driving. Coal or diesel power everywhere left use thinking it was normal that there were clouds and smog everywhere. Hell, you could smoke in hospitals, not because they were healthy or not, but because compared to the smell of the rest of the shit in the air, it wasn't so bad.
Now, in 2021, I use an electric kick scooter to stand around and smoke. This way I'm spreading the smoke super thin by always moving. I miss the days I could just wake up, roll over, light a smoke and blow it out th
Re: (Score:2)
If we completely ignore all political aspects of global warming and focus on what is most important in this world. Coffee (and maybe bananas), these are two crops which require specific climates to grow in specific air pressure (I think it's the air pressure) conditions. These are currently not doing so well. Coffee growers are burdened by a higher demand than ever... and this could be my fault as I finally make enough coffee to allow me to drink as much as I'd like. Though, in reality, we use A LOT of coffee and the regions capable of growing it are at maximum capacity without some really cool tech to help.
You shouldn't just rely on robusta and arabica beans. There are hundreds of coffee plants on this planet and many will tolerate higher temperatures than those two. What is threatening coffee is not global warming, but this duoculture. Take Coffea stenophylla [wikipedia.org], which was cultivated until the 1920s and will tolerate higher temperatures while even tasting better than arabica. Only a lower yield made planters prefer robusta and arabica. Once they adopt other species, your coffee supply is secure.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I've always been curious (Score:3)
Does ice melt flow under glaciers and "lube up" the glaciers so they melt and move faster?
Re: (Score:2)
The ice under glaciers is under enormous pressure: I suspect that a very small change in temperature could allow it to flow or at least reduce its strength.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Greenland is mostly surrounded by coastal mountains, so it can only happen this way locally in a few places.
There will be major, catastrophic melting in Antarctica and resulting rise in sea level before most of Greenland melts.
Re: (Score:2)
"The prevailing theory of surges is that the natural advance of a glacier causes friction, which melts the deepest ice. Loose gravel traps the meltwater underneath. But as snow and ice accumulate in the glacier's higher elevations, the mass there gets top heavy. A surge redistributes that mass to lower elevations, with the meltwater serving as a lubricant that helps the glacier pick up speed as it slides downhill."
There are two important features of glacial ice that are important here. First is that the ice is not truly solid, but acts like an extremely viscous, slow moving fluid. I guess a weird analogy would be, think about what would happen if you dumped a wheelbarrow full of bread dough down a playground slide.
Second, and more important to mountaineering (for safety reasons) is the formation of crevasses that form as the glacier flows. Think of the tiny cracks th
Oops! (Score:3)
Now what? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Now what? We all die?
Of course we are all going to die
Re: (Score:2)
That's true, and nearly all of the holdouts have more than the average number of legs [stackexchange.com]. Fingers crossed!
Geologists Marvel at Alaska Glacier's Rare 'Surge' (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You didn't figure out rocks, and you already blew your mind?
Did you know that rocks are made of stardust?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Have you never conducted the experiment of watching the minute hand of a clock? If not, you must have attended schools that were way less boring than the ones I attended.
Stilll Using Lost Climbers? (Score:2)
The standard way to measure the motion of glaciers has been to monitor when climbers, swept away in avalanches, pop out the bottom of the glacier, typically decades later. E.G., https://www.cambridge.org/core... [cambridge.org] (section II.2) where the Wharburton party disappeared in 1959 and reappeared in 1975, thus demonstrating that the Batura Glacier advanced about 1000 m per year.
Don't know if this method works for surges.
Inconvenent truth (Re:Why is it still there?) (Score:2)
Why was the parent post moderated down? A little too much of an "inconvenient truth"?
Re: (Score:2)
Why do you shill both for nuclear and against AGW belief? Your position on each is frankly unsupported by science at any level. Are you just a troll, or are you getting paid for this shit?
Re: (Score:2)
Where do I troll against AGW? I recall making the claim that AGW or not we will need nuclear power. That's not denying anything. That's pointing to the solution rather than just spinning wheels on how bad the problem is.
We will have catastrophic global warming if human civilization does not lower CO2 emissions? Okay then, what energy source has the lowest CO2 emissions for the most energy output? Nuclear fission. With some development on new reactors and uranium mining we can lower that even more.
Do y
Re: (Score:2)
Where do I troll against AGW?
Let me remind you....
Why was the parent post moderated down? A little too much of an "inconvenient truth"?
cringeworthy (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3)
The scientists were wondering if this ~50 year periodical event would happen again, because they were unsure if the glacier would survive another 50 years.
That's pretty legitimate.
Re: (Score:2)
no it is not pretty legitimate. The event has happened as usual, speculating that future events may not happen is irrelevant to the occurance on hand, especially when it is expected to be so far in the future. It really is just tacking this on because climate change!.
LOL- what?
Speculation about future events is irrelevant?
Is this a "shut up scientists, and don't try to do your sciencey stuff with me" thing?
I'm pretty sure to people who study these periodical surges, whether or not it happens in 50 years or not is quite important to them.
I get it- your worldview conflicts with science.
I'm sure that's wildly uncomfortable for you. But nobody is going to shut up because it offends your stupidity.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
When an astrophysicist speculates about the existence of aliens, are you equally as critical?
Or when a geneticist speculates about the long term effects of antibiotic overuse?
Na, you don't.
You're just pissed off because the sciencey guys speculated about something that causes you painful cognitive dissonance.
My recommendation? Get the fuck over it. Reality doesn't give a fuck what you think, and people smarter than you are going to continue to
Argh â¦. (Score:1)
can't help but wonder (Score:1)
If you laid down in front of a glacier, would it run you over or just push you along slowly? I'm imagining something like the steamroller scene from Austin Powers but more anticlimactic.
Re:can't help but wonder (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Is that like them horrible gravel mountains in Minecraft that try to kill you when you are mining your way thru?