| Literature DB >> 31818944 |
Donaldi S Permana1,2,3, Lonnie G Thompson4,3, Ellen Mosley-Thompson2,5, Mary E Davis2, Ping-Nan Lin2, Julien P Nicolas2, John F Bolzan2, Broxton W Bird6, Vladimir N Mikhalenko7, Paolo Gabrielli2,3, Victor Zagorodnov2, Keith R Mountain8, Ulrich Schotterer9, Wido Hanggoro10, Muhammad N Habibie10, Yohanes Kaize11, Dodo Gunawan10, Gesang Setyadi11, Raden D Susanto12,13, Alfonso Fernández14, Bryan G Mark2,5.
Abstract
The glaciers near Puncak Jaya in Papua, Indonesia, the highest peak between the Himalayas and the Andes, are the last remaining tropical glaciers in the West Pacific Warm Pool (WPWP). Here, we report the recent, rapid retreat of the glaciers near Puncak Jaya by quantifying the loss of ice coverage and reduction of ice thickness over the last 8 y. Photographs and measurements of a 30-m accumulation stake anchored to bedrock on the summit of one of these glaciers document a rapid pace in the loss of ice cover and a ∼5.4-fold increase in the thinning rate, which was augmented by the strong 2015-2016 El Niño. At the current rate of ice loss, these glaciers will likely disappear within the next decade. To further understand the mechanisms driving the observed retreat of these glaciers, 2 ∼32-m-long ice cores to bedrock recovered in mid-2010 are used to reconstruct the tropical Pacific climate variability over approximately the past half-century on a quasi-interannual timescale. The ice core oxygen isotopic ratios show a significant positive linear trend since 1964 CE (0.018 ± 0.008‰ per year; P < 0.03) and also suggest that the glaciers' retreat is augmented by El Niño-Southern Oscillation processes, such as convection and warming of the atmosphere and sea surface. These Papua glaciers provide the only tropical records of ice core-derived climate variability for the WPWP.Entities:
Keywords: ENSO; Papua Indonesia; climate change; glacier retreat; tropical ice cores
Year: 2019 PMID: 31818944 PMCID: PMC6936586 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1822037116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205