In Antarctica, No Warming Trend Scientists Find Temperatures Have Gotten Colder in Past Two Decades
By Guy Gugliotta Washington Post Staff Writer Monday, January 14, 2002; Page A02
The Earth may be in the midst of a planet-wide warming cycle, but in a startling departure from global trends, scientists have found that temperatures on the Antarctic continent have fallen steadily for more than two decades.
Researcher Peter Doran said scientists working in the McMurdo Dry Valleys of east Antarctica have found temperatures dropping at a rate of 1.2 degrees Fahrenheit per decade since 1986, and have observed similar downward trends across the continent since 1978.
Doran stressed that although scientists could not explain the falling temperatures, the research "does not change the fact that the planet has warmed up on the whole. The findings simply point out that Antarctica is not responding as expected."
The United Nations' Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has concluded that there has been a net rise in global air temperature of 0.1 degrees Fahrenheit per decade in the 20th century, a calculation that includes the Antarctic data.
Doran also warned that "you don't want to overstate the effects" of the cooling trend, because any rise in sea level caused by global warming this century is expected to come from thermal expansion of existing oceans and not from any theoretical melting of the southern ice cap.
"I'd be very careful with this," added Michael Oppenheimer, chief scientist for Environmental Defense. "My general view has been that there's simply not enough data to make a broad statement about all of Antarctica."
In a paper published yesterday in the online version of the journal Nature, Doran and other members of the National Science Foundation's Longterm Ecological Research team presented data gathered during years of research in the Dry Valleys near McMurdo Sound.
The Dry Valleys are a perpetually snow-free mountainous desert of chill, arid soils, bleak, bedrock outcroppings and ice-covered lakes. Microscopic invertebrates, mostly nematodes, make up a fragile ecosystem.
Maintenance of this marginal environment depends on an annual period of four to six weeks of above-freezing temperatures during the southern summer, Doran said. The relative warmth causes melt water from hillside glaciers to cascade downward in seasonal arroyos that feed the lakes.
"A lot of the people [co-authors] in the paper have been working in the valleys since the mid-'80s, and at first it seemed that lake levels were going up," said Doran, a hydrometeorologist from the University of Illinois at Chicago.
"But two or three years ago, when we were waiting for the big summers, we noticed that they didn't come," he added. "We were thinking that warm summers were the norm, and we were saying, 'It's going to get back to normal,' but it never did."
So the researchers began looking at data collected since the project's inception, and found that temperatures had been dropping, not rising, since 1986, with the effect most pronounced in summer and autumn. Glacial ice wasn't melting, streams weren't flowing, lakes were shrinking and microorganisms were disappearing.
Next, Doran said, the scientists looked at data collected since 1966 from permanent installations throughout the Antarctic. Previous studies had shown overall warming, but the researchers found that these calculations relied disproportionately on readings from the Antarctic Peninsula, the continent's northernmost piece of land and home of the greatest number of scientific outposts.
The peninsula projects into the south Atlantic and "seems to be part of the regular climate tendency" toward global warming, Doran said, while the Antarctic continent is ringed by a cold water current that isolates the landmass in its own ecosystem.
When the researchers corrected for the peninsular distortion, they found that Antarctica as a whole had gotten considerably colder. "Temperatures were rising between 1966 and 1978," Doran said, but then they started to fall and have continued falling ever since.
Doran said the researchers cannot explain why this has happened. They do know that temperatures in the Dry Valleys get warmer when the wind blows and when there are clouds in the sky.
He explained that as winds roll downhill off the Antarctic plateau into the Dry Valleys, the air compresses and heats up as a result, an effect similar to the Chinook winds of the western United States.
At the same time, relatively warm summer winds gathering speed over the ocean bring warmer air in from the coast to promote the thaw, he said. Wind generally brings clouds, he added, which appear to add to the warming effect.
Recently, however, "we're getting a decrease in winds from both directions," Doran said, and, perhaps as a consequence, temperatures in the Dry Valleys are dropping. "It's clearly connected to the winds, but what's controlling the decrease in the winds is not clear."
Also, he noted, still air in the Dry Valleys tells researchers nothing about why temperatures are dropping on the plateau: "We've sort of hit a point where we're a little confused," he said. washingtonpost.com |