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  • Ancient Ice Melt Unearthed in Antarctic Mud: 20 Meter Sea Level Rise, Five Million Years Ago

    Ancient Ice Melt Unearthed in Antarctic Mud: 20 Meter Sea Level Rise, Five Million Years Ago

    July 21, 2013 — Global warming five million years ago may have caused parts of Antarctica’s large ice sheets to melt and sea levels to rise by approximately 20 metres, scientists report today in the journal Nature Geoscience.


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    The researchers, from Imperial College London, and their academic partners studied mud samples to learn about ancient melting of the East Antarctic ice sheet. They discovered that melting took place repeatedly between five and three million years ago, during a geological period called Pliocene Epoch, which may have caused sea levels to rise approximately ten metres.

    Scientists have previously known that the ice sheets of West Antarctica and Greenland partially melted around the same time. The team say that this may have caused sea levels to rise by a total of 20 metres.

    The academics say understanding this glacial melting during the Pliocene Epoch may give us insights into how sea levels could rise as a consequence of current global warming. This is because the Pliocene Epoch had carbon dioxide concentrations similar to now and global temperatures comparable to those predicted for the end of this century.

    Dr Tina Van De Flierdt, co-author from the Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College London, says: “The Pliocene Epoch had temperatures that were two or three degrees higher than today and similar atmospheric carbon dioxide levels to today. Our study underlines that these conditions have led to a large loss of ice and significant rises in global sea level in the past. Scientists predict that global temperatures of a similar level may be reached by the end of this century, so it is very important for us to understand what the possible consequences might be.”

    The East Antarctic ice sheet is the largest ice mass on Earth, roughly the size of Australia. The ice sheet has fluctuated in size since its formation 34 million years ago, but scientists have previously assumed that it had stabilised around 14 million years ago.

    The team in today’s study were able to determine that the ice sheet had partially melted during this “stable” period by analysing the chemical content of mud in sediments. These were drilled from depths of more than three kilometres below sea level off the coast of Antarctica.

    Analysing the mud revealed a chemical fingerprint that enabled the team to trace where it came from on the continent. They discovered that the mud originated from rocks that are currently hidden under the ice sheet. The only way that significant amounts of this mud could have been deposited as sediment in the sea would be if the ice sheet had retreated inland and eroded these rocks, say the team.

    The academics suggest that the melting of the ice sheet may have been caused in part by the fact that some of it rests in basins below sea level. This puts the ice in direct contact with seawater and when the ocean warms, as it did during the Pliocene, the ice sheet becomes vulnerable to melting.

    Carys Cook, co-author and research postgraduate from the Grantham Institute for Climate Change at Imperial, adds: “Scientists previously considered the East Antarctic ice sheet to be more stable than the much smaller ice sheets in West Antarctica and Greenland, even though very few studies of East Antarctic ice sheet have been carried out. Our work now shows that the East Antarctic ice sheet has been much more sensitive to climate change in the past than previously realised. This finding is important for our understanding of what may happen to the Earth if we do not tackle the effects of climate change.”

    The next step will see the team analysing sediment samples to determine how quickly the East Antarctic ice sheet melted during the Pliocene. This information could be useful in the future for predicting how quickly the ice sheet could melt as a result of global warming.

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    The above story is reprinted from materials provided by Imperial College London, via AlphaGalileo.

    Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


    Journal Reference:

    1. Carys P. Cook, Tina van de Flierdt, Trevor Williams, Sidney R. Hemming, Masao Iwai, Munemasa Kobayashi, Francisco J. Jimenez-Espejo, Carlota Escutia, Jhon Jairo González, Boo-Keun Khim, Robert M. McKay, Sandra Passchier, Steven M. Bohaty, Christina R. Riesselman, Lisa Tauxe, Saiko Sugisaki, Alberto Lopez Galindo, Molly O. Patterson, Francesca Sangiorgi, Elizabeth L. Pierce, Henk Brinkhuis, Adam Klaus, Annick Fehr, James A. P. Bendle, Peter K. Bijl, Stephanie A. Carr, Robert B. Dunbar, José Abel Flores, Travis G. Hayden, Kota Katsuki, Gee Soo Kong, Mutsumi Nakai, Matthew P. Olney, Stephen F. Pekar, Jörg Pross, Ursula Röhl, Toyosaburo Sakai, Prakash K. Shrivastava, Catherine E. Stickley, Shouting Tuo, Kevin Welsh, Masako Yamane. Dynamic behaviour of the East Antarctic ice sheet during Pliocene warmth. Nature Geoscience, 2013; DOI: 10.1038/ngeo1889

    APA

    MLA

    Imperial College London (2013, July 21). Ancient ice melt unearthed in Antarctic mud: 20 meter sea level rise, five million years ago. ScienceDaily. Retrieved July 22, 2013, from http://www.sciencedaily.com­ /releases/2013/07/130721161502.htm?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+sciencedaily%2Fearth_climate%2Fearth_science+%28ScienceDaily%3A+Earth+%26+Climate+News+–+Earth+Science%29

    Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

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  • June 2013 Temperatures Continue String Of 340 Consecutive Warmer-Than-Average Months

    June 2013 Temperatures Continue String Of 340 Consecutive Warmer-Than-Average Months

    Posted: 07/20/2013 8:13 am EDT

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    From Climate Central’s Andrew Freedman:

    June was one of the hottest such months on record globally, based on newly released data from NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). The month extended the unbroken string of warmer-than-average months to 340, or a stretch of more than 28 years. That means that no one under the age of 28 has ever experienced a month in which global average temperatures were cooler than average (based on the 20th century average).

    Global average surface temperatures during June were either the second or the fifth-warmest on record for the month, based on analyses by NASA and NOAA, respectively. The two agencies keep tabs on global temperature trends using large networks of surface monitoring stations and statistical approaches to fill in gaps where stations are sparse, but they use slightly different methods to analyze the data, which can result in slight differences in their rankings.

    image 1

    June global average temperature departures from average. (Credit: NOAA)

    June continued the long-term warming trend tied to manmade greenhouse gas pollution as well as natural climate variability. The planet has not recorded a single month with temperatures below the 20th century average since February 1985, when the cult classic film “The Breakfast Club” was released, and the last year with a cooler-than-average June was in 1976. This year so far is tied with 2003 as the seventh-warmest year on record, NOAA said.

    Last month featured unusually wet conditions in the eastern U.S., and tragically wet conditions in northwest India, where rainfall that was 200 percent of average inundated parts of the state of Uttarakhand, killing nearly 6,000 and causing widespread destruction. Areas that experienced higher-than-average temperatures during the month include north-central Canada, most of Alaska — which had its third-warmest June on record — and the Western U.S., where about 80 percent of the region was in some stage of drought by the end of the month.

    Much of northern and eastern Europe, western Russia, parts of Siberia, and north-central Australia also had warmer-than-average conditions, while western and southern Europe, Central Asia, and India had cooler-than-average conditions, NOAA reported.

    According to NOAA, global land surface temperatures were the third-warmest on record, while ocean temperatures were closer to average, coming in as the 10th-warmest on record. An area of cooler-than-average waters in the eastern tropical Pacific may be acting to dampen global temperatures slightly, although NOAA experts said on Thursday that neither an El Niño nor a La Niña event is taking place, and one is not likely to take place through the fall. Such naturally occurring climate cycles can influence global weather and climate conditions, and can alter global average temperatures on shorter timescales than manmade carbon pollution, which studies have shown is most likely responsible for the long-term increase in global surface temperatures.

    image 2

    Global average precipitation anomalies for the year so far. (Credit: NOAA)

    A recent report issued by the World Meteorological Organization found that nine of the 10 years between 2001-2010 were among the 10 warmest years on record for the globe, based on that organization’s rankings, which can differ slightly from NOAA and NASA’s rankings.

    In the U.S., June was yet another month of extremes, with a scorchingly hot and dry West contrasted with a record wet and relatively cool Midwest and East. In all, 18 states had a top 10 wettest June, with Delaware and New Jersey setting records for the wettest such month since record keeping began there in the late 19th century. Utah, on the other hand, set a record for its driest June, with a statewide average precipitation of barely a few drops — just 0.01 inches of rain.

    The stark contrast in precipitation between the West and areas east of the Mississippi River has held true for much of 2013, with California having a record dry start to the year, while four states in the Midwest were record wet for the same period. California has had just 31 percent of its average precipitation for the year, said Jake Crouch, a climate expert at the National Climatic Data Center, on a conference call with reporters.

    “We’re much below where we should be, and we’re much below the previous record Jan to June,” he said.

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    • Not A Drop To Drink

      A 2012 study from the U.S. Forest Service found that without “major adaptation efforts,” parts of the U.S. are likely to see “<a href=”http://www.treesearch.fs.fed.us/pubs/42363″ target=”_blank”>substantial future water shortages</a>.” Climate change, especially for the Southwest U.S., can both <a href=”http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2013/02/25/1638541/study-climate-change-dry-up-us-reservoirs-lake-powell-lake-mead” target=”_blank”>increase water demand and decrease water supply</a>.

    • An International Tragedy

      Research by British government found that <a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/03/15/somalia-famine-climate-change_n_2883088.html” target=”_blank”>climate change may have contributed to a famine in East Africa</a> that killed between 50,000 and 100,000 people in 2010 and 2011. At least 24 percent of the cause of a lack of major rains in 2011 can be attributed to man-made greenhouse gases, Met Office modeling showed. (TONY KARUMBA/AFP/Getty Images)

    • A Mighty Wind

      The <a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2013/mar/25/frozen-spring-arctic-sea-ice-loss” target=”_blank”>dramatic and rapid loss of sea ice in recent years</a> has consequences beyond the Arctic. Scientists have found the melting shifts the position of the Jet Stream, bringing cold Arctic air further south and increasing the odds of intense snow storms and extreme spring weather.

    • An Itch You Can’t Scratch

      Research indicates that increased levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide <a href=”http://www.onearth.org/blog/poison-ivy-climate-change” target=”_blank”>result in larger poison ivy plants</a>. Even worse, climate change will mean that the plant’s irritating oil will also get more potent.

    • Worsening Allergies

      The <a href=”http://www.livescience.com/28320-climate-change-allergies.html” target=”_blank”>spring 2013 allergy season could be one of the worst ever</a>, thanks to climate change. Experts say that increased precipitation, along with an early spring, late-ending fall and higher levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide may bring more pollen from plants and increased mold and fungal growth.

    • Gators In The Yard

      North American alligators require a certain temperature range for survival and reproduction, traditionally limiting them to the southern U.S. <a href=”http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/animal_forecast/2013/02/alligators_in_virginia_climate_change_could_be_pushing_cold_blooded_species.single.html” target=”_blank”>But warming temperatures could open new turf</a> to gators with more sightings farther north.

    • Melting Blitz In South America

      High in the Peruvian Andes, parts of the world’s largest tropical ice sheet have melted at an unbelievable pace. Scientists found that significant <a href=”http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/05/world/americas/1600-years-of-ice-in-perus-andes-melted-in-25-years-scientists-say.html” target=”_blank”>portions of the Quelccaya Ice Cap that took over 1,600 years to form have melted in only 25 years</a>. (Perito Moreno Glacier pictured)

    • Wine To Go?

      Along with other agricultural impacts, <a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/08/climate-change-wine_n_3039673.html” target=”_blank”>climate change may have a dramatic effect on the world’s most famous winemaking regions</a> in coming decades. Areas suitable for grape cultivation my shrink, and temperature changes may impact the signature taste of wines from certain regions.

    • Home Sweet Home

      Thanks to climate change, <a href=”http://www.guardian.co.uk/sustainable-business/blog/polar-arctic-greenland-ice-climate-change” target=”_blank”>low-lying island nations may have to evacuate</a>, and sooner than previously expected. Melting of the Greenland and west Antarctic ice sheets has been underestimated, scientists say, and populations in countries like the Maldives, Kiribati, Tuvalu and others may need to move within a decade.

    • Trouble On The Ice

      Warmer winters in northern latitudes could mean <a href=”http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2013/01/18/hamilton-climate-change-rinks.html” target=”_blank”>fewer days for outdoor hockey</a>. An online project called RinkWatch aims to collect data on the condition of outdoor winter ice rinks in Canada and the northern U.S. and educate people on the impacts of climate change.

    • A Damper On Your Raw Bar?

      Experts speculate that <a href=”http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2010/08/100806-oyster-herpes-global-warming-climate-change-science/” target=”_blank”>warming oceans may have played a part in a strain of herpes</a> that has killed Pacific oysters in Europe in recent years.

    • The Color-Changing Bears

      As Arctic ice melts and polar bears see more of their habitat disappear, the <a href=”http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2013/03/14/polar-bears-turn-brown-climate-change_n_2878684.html” target=”_blank”>animals could lose their famous white coats</a>. Researchers have already witnessed polar bears hybridizing with their brown cousins, but note that it would take thousands of years from them to adapt themselves out of existence.

    • Less Time On The Chair Lift

      Climate change means warmer winters in northern latitudes and a shorter ski season. By 2039, <a href=”http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/13/us/climate-change-threatens-ski-industrys-livelihood.html” target=”_blank”>more than half of the Northeast’s ski resorts</a> will not be able to maintain a 100-day season, according to the New York Times. Ski areas will be less likely to receive regular snowfall, and warmer daily low temperatures mean fewer opportunities for snowmaking.

    • Sour Apples

      Apples produced in one Himalayan state of India are already losing their taste and even turning sour, experts say. <a href=”http://zeenews.india.com/news/eco-news/arunachal-apples-losing-taste-due-to-climate-chang_831169.html” target=”_blank”>Increased rainfall and erratic weather in the region mean less than ideal conditions</a> for famously-sweet Kashmiri apples.

    • A Tough Time For Mushers

      With climate change already impacting northern latitudes, <a href=”http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/06/sports/warm-weather-forces-changes-ahead-of-iditarod-race.html” target=”_blank”>warmer winters in Alaska could mean less than ideal conditions</a> for the famous Iditarod sled dog race. “It definitely has us concerned,” a musher and Iditarod spokeswoman who’s already breeding dogs with thinner coats told The New York Times.

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      <a href=”http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/11/121108-climate-change-coffee-coffea-arabica-botanical-garden-science/” target=”_blank”>Climate change may dramatically shrink the area suitable for coffee cultivation</a> by the end of the century and cause the extinction of Arabica coffee plants in the wild. Starbucks has already declared that “<a href=”http://www.starbucks.com/responsibility/environment/climate-change” target=”_blank”>Addressing climate change is a priority</a>.”

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  • Twin earthquake kill at least 47 in Gansu province, China

    Twin earthquake kill at least 47 in Gansu province, China

    • Staff Writers
    • News Limited Network
    • July 22, 2013 2:31PM

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    Residents take shelter on a street after an earthquake in downtown Dingxi in northwest China’s Gansu province on July 22, 2013. AFP PHOTO Source: AFP

    TWO strong earthquakes have devastated parts of western China, killing at least 47 people and injuring 296 with villages cut off from contact.

    The US Geological Survey measured the magnitude of the initial quake as 5.9 and the second at 5.6-magnitude in Gansu province. The Chinese government measured the first quake at 6.6 magnitude.

    The death toll has risen to 47, according to the Gansu provincial government, South China Morning Post reported. At least 296 have been injured.

    An estimated 380 buildings have collapsed and 5,600 more have been damaged in Zhang county, the Dingxi government said, Sina Weibo reported.

    Eight towns in remote, mountainous areas have been seriously damaged in the earthquake and subsequent flooding and mudslides, Xinhua News Agency reported.

    Power outages and communications were cut off in 13 towns in Zhangxian county, Xinhua said.

    The Lanzhou military region has dispatched 1000 soldiers with Gansu Military police sending 500 troops to assist in rescue efforts, Phoenix News reported.

    Rescuers are battling to reach survivors in remote areas.

    The quake hit near the city of Dingxi in Gansu province, a region of mountains, desert and pastureland with a population of 26 million. It is one of China’s more lightly populated provinces, although the Dingxi area has a greater concentration of farms and towns with a total population of about 2.7 million.

    Pictures broadcast on state television showed rural villages with rubble-strewn streets and houses crumbled. Locals in Minxian county in Gansu province, said they saw trees and homes shaking, with the quake lasting for about one minute.

    Earlier, an official surnamed He from Minxian, said there were 19 dead and more than 200 injured in seven townships severely hit by the quakes. The Chinese government measured the first earthquake at 6.6 magnitude

    The quake hit near the city of Dingxi in Gansu province, a region of mountains, desert and pastureland with a population of 26 million. That makes it one of China’s more lightly populated provinces, although the Dingxi area has a greater concentration of farms and towns with a total population of about 2.7 million.

    Deaths were also reported in Min County in the rural southern part of

  • Caucus votes to support new rules

    Caucus votes to support new rules

    AAPUpdated July 22, 2013, 2:03 pm

    The federal Labor caucus has endorsed a plan to allow the parliamentary leader to be elected by MPs and the party’s 40,000 rank and file members.

    Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says this means the decision to elect the leader will no longer be subject to factional influences.

    “Each of our members gets to have a say, a real say, in the future leadership of our party,” he said after a caucus meeting in the Sydney suburb of Balmain.

    “Decisions can no longer simply be made by a factional few.”

    Under the reform, the leadership vote will be split 50-50 between caucus and grassroots members.

    As well, an election for the leader will automatically occur after a federal poll in which the ALP goes to opposition.

    An election can also be called if a leader resigns, or if at least 75 per cent of members of the caucus sign a petition stating the leader is bringing the party into disrepute.

    But if Labor is in opposition, a petition signed by only 60 per cent of caucus members is required for a leadership vote.

    The 60 per cent rule was one of three amendments to party rules accepted by the caucus, and seconded by Deputy Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

    The second amendment related to the close of nominations for the election of the parliamentary leader.

    The third will allow the deputy leader or the highest-ranked House of Representatives MP to act as interim leader while a ballot is held.

    “For the future, this is an important set of reforms for the party,” Mr Rudd said.

    “We are a party of the grassroots.

    “We are at our best when we are listening to people right across the country and we are at our best when the rank and file of our membership, all 44,000 of them, know they have an active say in the future direction of our party.”

    The caucus meeting on Monday took almost three hours.

    Mr Rudd also addressed MPs on the government’s planning for the upcoming election and his policy changes on the carbon pricing regime and the treatment of asylum seeker boat arrivals.

    The prime minister said he had some further “challenges” to deal with before an election.

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  • PNG asylum deal could be in breach of UN convention

    PNG asylum deal could be in breach of UN convention

    Broadcast:
    Monday 22 July 2013 7:35AM (view full episode)

    A respected expert on international refugee law has told RN Breakfast that Australia doesn’t have an asylum problem, but a political problem, and refugees are paying the price, as James Bourne reports.

     

    The Federal Government has continued to defend its decision to send all asylum seekers arriving by boat in Australia to Papua New Guinea. Under the regional agreement, Australia will bear the full cost of the plan—including the cost of genuine refugees being resettled.

    Dr James Hathaway, an expert on international refugee law, told RN Breakfast that Kevin Rudd’s announcement on Friday was entirely unprecedented.

    ‘This plan is without question the most bizarre overreaction I have seen in more than 30 years of working on refugee law,’ said Dr Hathaway. ‘It just makes no sense.’

    ‘The only mandatory deportation to PNG is going to be so-called boat arrivals. Does the Prime Minister think that every refugee should arrive with a Qantas first class ticket in order to be real?’

    The people who are so desperate—who so fear for their loss of life that they’re prepared to put their fate into the hands of smugglers and take a horrible boat journey to survive—are the very ones that Australia seems to want to punish.

    Dr James Hathaway, international refugee law expert

    Dr Hathaway, a professorial fellow at the University of Melbourne, suggested that the deal struck between Australia and Papua New Guinea was in breach of the the United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees.

    ‘The convention itself says you can’t penalise refugees for arriving without authorisation,’ he said. ‘There is no visa that Australia or anybody else gives for a person to come and seek asylum.’

    ‘To take people who are… coming and asking for asylum and dumping them into the hell hole of PNG is in my view both an illegal penalty and a discriminatory penalty, which puts Australia in breach of the convention on two points.’

    The crisis Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says is addressed by the deal doesn’t even exist, Dr Hathaway said. Compared to other developed countries, Australia’s intake of 30,000 refugees is ‘a totally average, absolutely manageable number’.

    ‘What is really striking about this is that Australia, unlike any developed country that I know, has been attracting almost exclusively genuine refugees as boat arrivals,’ Dr Hathaway told RN.

    ‘It’s the boat people who seem to have attracted his ire. It’s the most extraordinarily bizarre singling out of the group that…ought to be the very group that we should care about the most,’ he said.

    ‘So Australia does not have an asylum problem, it has a political problem, and refugees are being made to pay the price for Kevin Rudd wanting to appear, I think, more butch that Julia Gillard and more reactionary than Tony Abbott.’

    ‘The people who are so desperate—who so fear for their loss of life that they’re prepared to put their fate into the hands of smugglers and take a horrible boat journey to survive—are the very ones that Australia seems to want to punish.’

    Dr Hathaway suggested that sending genuine refugees to Papua New Guinea was a reckless plan, despite the nation being a signatory to the Refugee Convention.

    ‘We’re talking about a country that ranks 168th in the world in terms of life expectancy, where more than half the country doesn’t have sanitation or clean water, one in two women in PNG have been raped, homosexuals can to jail for 14 years, this is where we’re going to send people who have done nothing wrong, other than have the courage to say that they don’t want to be persecuted for who they are in the country where they lived.’

    The High Court’s 2011 ruling on the Gillard government’s proposed Malaysia Solution stated that an arrangement that doesn’t legally guarantee refugees the right to work, education and access to the courts breached obligations under the UN refugee convention. Despite these rights not being guaranteed by the PNG agreement, Australian Attorney General Mark Dreyfus has said that the arrangement ‘complies with our international obligations under the refugee convention’.

    Dr Hathaway disagrees.

    ‘The word ‘rights’ doesn’t even appear in the agreement that the Prime Minister of Australia signed with the Prime Minister of PNG,’ he said. ‘That’s what makes it illegal.’

    ‘The government seems to think that its only obligation under the convention is to make sure that somebody at risk of being persecuted doesn’t get sent back to persecution.’

    ‘That argument is what the government put to the High Court of Australia in the Malaysia case and the High Court quite explicitly rejected that argument.’

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  • Key to ocean life shows large regional variations

    19 July 2013 Last updated at 20:36 GMT

    Key to ocean life shows large regional variations

    By Simon Redfern Reporter, BBC News

    A plankton bloom west of Ireland in the Atlantic Plant plankton blooms in the ocean can be seen from space.

    Iron, key for ocean plant plankton growth, shows larger variations than previously recognised, with implications for models of climate.

    Microscopic marine plants, phytoplankton, lock up atmospheric carbon dioxide, but a lack of iron limits photosynthesis.

    In Nature Communications, researchers report regional iron variations in the oceans of up to 10,000 times.

    This observation is expected to improve ocean-climate models.

    Photosynthetic life is limited by low availability of iron in as much as one third of Earth’s surface oceans. The problem for phytoplankton is particularly acute around the Southern Ocean.

    Dr Will Homoky, lead author of the paper by teams at the Universities of Southampton and South Carolina, said: “Iron acts like a giant lever on marine life, storing carbon. It switches on growth of microscopic marine plants, which extract carbon dioxide from our atmosphere and lock it away in the ocean.”

    In separate studies, scientists have previously added iron to the ocean in iron-limited areas, which typically generates large blooms of phytoplankton. This has been suggested by some as a possible geoengineering solution to capture carbon from the atmosphere and transfer it to the ocean.

    It remains unclear what the fate of phytoplankton carbon, at the base of the food chain is, however, and the role of iron for fertilising the oceans is a developing field of research.

    Dr Homoky commented: “Satellite images of the oceans show less phytoplankton growth in the eastern South Atlantic off the African coast, than in the western South Atlantic, off South America. Our primary hypothesis is that there are more micronutrients like iron being mixed into the surface ocean from the south African continent than from South America.”

    The key to understanding these variations is now to understand how elements mix into the surface of the ocean, and how this in turn changes ocean life and potentially locks up atmospheric carbon dioxide.