Himalayan glaciers growing despite global warming
21 Apr,BBC
Glaciers in parts of the greater Himalayas are growing despite the
worldwide trend of ice melting due to warmer temperatures, a study has
found.
In the Karakoram mountain range on the border of Pakistan and China,
glaciers have defied global warming to become marginally larger over a
decade, researchers said.The French scientists produced three
dimensional maps of the range, which is separated from the Himalayas but
usually considered part of the same chain, between 1999 and 2008.Their
findings suggest the region is contravening the global pattern of
glacier shrinkage, which is taking place elsewhere in the Himalayas and
around the planet.
The impact of global warming in the region has been controversial
since an Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report wrongly
claimed in 2007 that glaciers in most of the greater Himalayan range
could vanish by 2035.
The research, published in the Nature Geoscience journal, comes a
month after a study which suggested the rate of ice loss in the
Himalayas was being overestimated due to inadequate monitoring methods.
Julie Gardelle, at CNRS-Université Grenoble, who led the project,
said the reason for the exception was unclear but could be related to
regional variation in temperature.She told The Guardian: “In our warming
world, there are regions of the Earth where, for a few years or decades,
the atmosphere is not warming or is even cooling.”So it is not really a
big surprise that there are some regions where the temperature is not
rising and the Karakoram may be one of those.
”In a comment piece in the same journal Graham Cogley, a Canadian
researcher who previously challenged the 2007 IPCC report, said making
sense of the differing glacial size figures produced by different
scientific techniques would “keep glaciologists busy for some time”.
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