Author: Neville

  • Only in Alaska? Creeping frozen landslide threatens critical highway and pipeline

    Only in Alaska? Creeping frozen landslide threatens critical highway and pipeline

    Laurel Andrews

    August 13, 2013
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    If left alone, the mysterious, icy landslide will reach a highway critical to Alaska’s North Slope oil patch — and after that will even threaten the trans-Alaska pipeline itself. But there’s still plenty of time to stop it. Dr. Ronald Daanen / DNR

    A massive landslide of frozen debris and ice is inching its way toward the Dalton Highway, outside of the Gates of the Arctic National Park Preserve, and nobody is quite sure how to stop it. If left to its own devices, in the next ten years the little-understood formation will reach the highway which serves as the only ground link between Alaska’s road system and its critical North Slope oil patch. If the slide isn’t stopped, it will eventually threaten the trans-Alaska pipeline itself.

    As new evidence shows that the formations — called frozen debris lobes — have sped up over time, researchers are calling for more studies on the huge, frozen landslides, and the Department of Transportation is assessing how to best handle the threat to the state’s infrastructure.

    The best solution, for now, may be to simply get out of the landslide’s path.

    Frozen landslides threaten Alaska’s economy

    There are around 200 frozen debris lobes mapped out in the Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve, which is the northernmost national park in the U.S. and is located entirely above the Arctic Circle. The slowly-moving landslides are frozen masses of weathered bedrock eroded into collections of sediment, ice, water, and unfortunate bits of foliage consumed in its wake.

    “These features seem to be eating trees,” said Ronald Daanen, a geohydrologist with the Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys, noting that he had found a piece of wood in one lobe that was 1,300 years old.

    The lobe in question, named “FDL-A” is huge, at about three-quarters of a mile long, more than 600 feet wide and 80 feet tall. It is now 150 feet from the Dalton Highway. Moving at its current rate, the landslide will reach the road in around 10 years.

    The Dalton Highway is a 414-mile road that runs from the Interior community of Livengood, about 80 miles north of Fairbanks, to Prudhoe Bay on the Arctic Ocean coast. The highway runs parallel to the trans-Alaska pipeline, and is traversed mainly by the trucking industry, bringing supplies up and down from Prudhoe Bay. The highway remains open year-round, and has only been shut down due to planned maintenance or by avalanches at Atigun Pass, north of Gates of the Arctic National Park.

    Alyeska Pipeline Services Co. spokesperson Michelle Egan said that the consortium in charge of the line is well aware of the formations, and is working with the state to stay “well ahead of any permafrost changes” that could threaten the pipeline’s infrastructure.

    Should the highway shut down, “it would not be a trivial thing,” said Jeff Curry, Alaska Department of Transportation’s northern region materials engineer. He said it would be a “very big blow to Alaska’s economy,” which is heavily dependent on the North Slope’s oil and gas industry.

    How do debris lobes move?

    These frozen landslides were formed sometime after the ice age, between 5,000 and 10,000 years ago. The lobes, said Daanen, are made mostly of permafrost, but they carry liquid water inside the frozen earth, an “uncommon phenomenon.” Pressure within the mass keeps the water from freezing, and gravity helps push the mass along its path.

    The debris lobes also have some similarities to glaciers. The “rate of movement is very similar,” Daanen said, varying seasonally and between individual lobes, with each lobe moving at a different pace. The lobes also have cracks on the surface which mimic cracks in glacial ice.

    No one is quite sure how the formations came to be. “One of the mysteries is really what’s driving these things to form,” Daanen said.

    One theory is that during the ice age, the tops of hills that remained elevated above the glaciated landscape were subject to harsh erosion, and the sediment wore away and accumulated on the sides of the hills. Once the glaciers disappeared, these frozen blobs of debris “just started moving down the hill,” Daanen said.

    Whatever the cause, these massive lobes seem to be speeding up in the 21st century.

    From 1955 to the early 2000s, FDL-A moved at about a half-inch a day. But around 2004 or 2005, the lobe’s speed increased. “I think something has shifted since that time,” Daanen said. Now, the lobe is moving around an inch a day.

    Scientists also have their eye on one of the lobes that is moving much faster, named “FDL-D”, which galloped 150 feet last year — a monumental pace for a frozen landslide.

    It’s possible that FDL-A could also increase in speed, as it seems to be showing similar characteristics as FDL-D, specifically increased cracking along the top of the formation.

    Discovered and rediscovered

    USGS Geologist Thomas Hamilton first mapped out the frozen debris lobes in the early 1970s, as part of the pipeline planning process.

    Decades later, in 2007, Daanen was traveling on the Dalton Highway, measuring snow depths on the North Slope, when he spotted the formations.

    “I thought I should just keep an eye out for drunken forests, because that’s one of the signs of global warming,” Daanen said. A drunken forest — where the trees are criss-crossed and falling over — occurs when permafrost thaws and the ground re-settles, causing the trees to shift.

    Daanen began to see drunken forests just north of Coldfoot, about 250 miles north of Fairbanks. Then he noticed that the reeling trees were all on slope-like features. His curiosity piqued, Daanen snapped some photos of the slopes and went along his way.

    Daanen met up with Hamilton later that year and told him about his find. “He got very big eyes,” Daanen said. Hamilton was happy that his work from years before had been brought back to the table. He was also “kind of surprised that a permafrost scientist picked up on it and not a geologist,” Daanen laughed.

    “That’s kind of how the research got started,” Daanen said.

    A research grant with the University of Alaska Fairbanks followed in 2008, and studies on the frozen landslides began. Daanen and his colleague Margaret Darrow have been studying them ever since.

    Hamilton originally called the lobes “flow slides,” but Daanen, Darrow and Hamilton renamed the formations to “frozen debris lobes,” a generic name that describes the formation aptly enough.

    The Department of Transportation was first clued in to the dangers of the approaching lobe after Daanen told them about the issue.

    “Initially we were not excited about it,” Currey said. “We have to be a little skeptical when somebody says there’s an emergency.”

    Yet as additional data was brought to the table, indicating that the lobes were moving faster than before, the department “recognized that it was a real issue.”

    If you can’t stop it, move the highway

    The big question surrounding the frozen debris lobe: How can we stop it from slowly devouring the state’s infrastructure?

    While Daanen has found no “magic bullet” so far, he is eyeing the water inside the lobes as a possible key to stopping their movement. If that water could be turned to ice, the landslide could potentially be halted in its tracks, he said.

    Moving the road seems to be the solution so far. While DOT is still in the environment assessment stage of planning, relocating the road “looks to be the most favorable right now,” design project manager Jeff Organek said.

    The realignment of the road is wrapped into part of a larger, 26-mile revamp of that section of the highway that involves widening and paving the highway.

    DOT will likely shift the road 400 feet to the left, as far as possible before the highway runs into the pipeline it runs parallel to. “That will buy us quite a bit of time to learn more about the frozen debris lobe,” Currey said.

    To weave the road around the creeping frozen menace will take several years and several million dollars, at least. At this time “we don’t really know how long the realignment is going to be,” Organek said. A conservative estimate hovers around 2 miles of road, or about $4 million.

    DOT will have the environmental assessment concluded in the spring of 2014. With the lengthy contract and permitting processes ahead, construction on the new route will probably commence in the summer of 2016.

    Will prowling lobe devour old road?

    The old road will stay in place, and DOT will be watching to see how the lobe affects it. The lobe may just plow right over the road, consuming it as it has with unlucky trees. Or, the road embankment may ease the lobe’s movement, Currey said.

    “‘I think it’s going to push the whole road away,” Daanen said.

    Daanen will be returning to the site of FDL-A at the end of August. There’s still lots of work to be done, he said, and little funding to assist researchers.

    “We really need to get more data.”

    Although Daanen recently left the University of Alaska Fairbanks to work for the state’s Geological and Geophysical Survey department, he will continue to research the lobes in his spare time. “It would be silly not to continue,” he said.

    Contact Laurel Andrews at laurel(at)alaskadispatch.com

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  • UN Climate Change Report Draft Warns Of 3 Foot Sea Level Rise By 2100

    UN Climate Change Report Draft Warns Of 3 Foot Sea Level Rise By 2100

    The Huffington Post  |  By Posted: 08/19/2013 6:39 pm EDT  |  Updated: 08/19/2013 9:35 pm EDT

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    A leaked draft of the U.N.’s next major climate change report warns that global sea levels could rise more than three feet by the end of the century if greenhouse emissions continue unabated, The New York Times reported Monday.

    The Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change (IPCC) report is also more confident that human activities, like the burning of fossil fuels, are the chief cause of the atmospheric warming seen since the 1950s. The report’s authors say it is at least 95 percent likely that humans are behind this warming, according to an initial report from Reuters last Friday.

    This confidence is reflected in the study’s language. It’s “extremely likely” that humans caused “more than half of the observed increase in global average surface temperature from 1951 to 2010,” the Times quoted from the draft report.

    The IPCC outlines several sea level rise scenarios for the end of the century, based on efforts to limit emissions in the coming decades. The most optimistic emissions reductions could bring only a 10-inch rise, explains the Times, on top of the eight inches seen in the last century. If emissions continue at a runaway pace, sea levels could rise “at least 21 inches by 2100 and might rise a bit more than three feet.”

    The National Atmospheric and Oceanic Administration’s 2012 State of the Climate report, released earlier this month, showed global greenhouse gas emissions reached a new record high in 2011, and estimates suggest the record was broken again in 2012.

    “It’s good to see that the IPCC has moved in the right direction this time by at least trying to account for the key contribution to sea level rise from melting ice sheets,” director of Pennsylvania State University’s Earth System Science Center Michael Mann told The Huffington Post in an emailed statement, explaining that it was ignored in the previous IPCC report from 2007.

    “However, the projections they provide are still overly conservative, with an upper limit of roughly one meter by 2100, when there is published work that suggests the possibility of as much as two meters (six feet) sea level rise by 2100,” he added.

    “This fits a pattern of the IPCC tending to err on the side of conservative, in part–I believe—because of fear of being attacked by the climate change denial machine.”

    Describing the IPCC’s projections, Climate Progress’ Joe Romm wrote on Sunday, “Like every IPCC report, it is an instantly out-of-date snapshot that lowballs future warming because it continues to ignore large parts of the recent literature and omit what it can’t model.”

    A recent study published in the journal Nature Climate Change shows that with only 15.75 inches of sea level rise by mid-century, losses due to flooding in 136 of the world’s coastal cities may approach $1 trillion annually, reported Climate Central.

    IPCC spokesman Jonathan Lynn cautioned against drawing too many conclusions from the leaked drafts, but told the BBC on Monday, “We are not trying to keep it secret.” He said, “After the report is finished we are going to publish all the comments and response so that people can track the process.”

    Reuters’ breakdown of the IPCC draft also draws attention to the apparent slowdown in warming observed since 1998, despite rising greenhouse gas emissions. Romm contends the slowdown “turns out to be only true if one looks narrowly at surface air temperatures, where only a small fraction of warming ends up.”

    The Times emphasizes the international scientific panel’s further confidence in the future effects of unchecked emissions and notes, the experts “largely dismiss a recent slowdown in the pace of warming, which is often cited by climate change contrarians, as probably related to short-term factors.”

    The IPCC’s Fifth Assessment Report is set to be released in four parts

  • Coralline algal structure is more sensitive to rate, rather than the magnitude, of ocean acidification

    Coralline algal structure is more sensitive to rate, rather than the magnitude, of ocean acidification

    Published 20 August 2013 Science Leave a Comment
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    Marine pCO2 enrichment via ocean acidification (OA), upwelling and release from carbon capture and storage (CCS) facilities is projected to have devastating impacts on marine biomineralisers and the services they provide. However, empirical studies using stable endpoint pCO2 concentrations find species exhibit variable biological and geochemical responses rather than the expected negative patterns. In addition, the carbonate chemistry of many marine systems is now being observed to be more variable than previously thought. To underpin more robust projections of future OA impacts on marine biomineralisers and their role in ecosystem service provision, we investigate coralline algal responses to realistically variable scenarios of marine pCO2 enrichment. Coralline algae are important in ecosystem function; providing habitats and nursery areas, hosting high biodiversity, stabilizing reef structures and contributing to the carbon cycle. Red coralline marine algae were exposed for 80-days to one of three pH treatments: (1) current pH (control), (2) low pH (7.7) representing OA change and (3) an abrupt drop to low pH (7.7) representing the higher rates of pH change observed at natural vent systems, in areas of upwelling and during CCS releases. We demonstrate that red coralline algae respond differently to the rate and the magnitude of pH change induced by pCO2 enrichment. At low pH, coralline algae survived by increasing their calcification rates. However, when the change to low pH occurred at a fast rate we detected, using Raman spectroscopy, molecular bonding weaknesses in the calcite skeleton, with evidence of molecular positional disorder. This suggests that, while coralline algae will continue to calcify, they may be structurally weakened, putting at risk the ecosystem services they provide. Notwithstanding evolutionary adaptation, the ability of coralline algae to cope with OA may thus be determined primarily by the rate, rather than magnitude, at which pCO2 enrichment occurs.

     

    Kamenos N. A., Burdett H. L., Aloisio E., Findlay H. S., Martin S., Longbone C., Dunn J., Widdicombe S. & Calosi P., in press. Coralline algal structure is more sensitive to rate, rather than the magnitude, of ocean acidification. Global Change Biology. Article.

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    Published 20 August 2013 Science Leave a Comment
    Tags: , , , , , , , ,

    Marine pCO2 enrichment via ocean acidification (OA), upwelling and release from carbon capture and storage (CCS) facilities is projected to have devastating impacts on marine biomineralisers and the services they provide. However, empirical studies using stable endpoint pCO2 concentrations find species exhibit variable biological and geochemical responses rather than the expected negative patterns. In addition, the carbonate chemistry of many marine systems is now being observed to be more variable than previously thought. To underpin more robust projections of future OA impacts on marine biomineralisers and their role in ecosystem service provision, we investigate coralline algal responses to realistically variable scenarios of marine pCO2 enrichment. Coralline algae are important in ecosystem function; providing habitats and nursery areas, hosting high biodiversity, stabilizing reef structures and contributing to the carbon cycle. Red coralline marine algae were exposed for 80-days to one of three pH treatments: (1) current pH (control), (2) low pH (7.7) representing OA change and (3) an abrupt drop to low pH (7.7) representing the higher rates of pH change observed at natural vent systems, in areas of upwelling and during CCS releases. We demonstrate that red coralline algae respond differently to the rate and the magnitude of pH change induced by pCO2 enrichment. At low pH, coralline algae survived by increasing their calcification rates. However, when the change to low pH occurred at a fast rate we detected, using Raman spectroscopy, molecular bonding weaknesses in the calcite skeleton, with evidence of molecular positional disorder. This suggests that, while coralline algae will continue to calcify, they may be structurally weakened, putting at risk the ecosystem services they provide. Notwithstanding evolutionary adaptation, the ability of coralline algae to cope with OA may thus be determined primarily by the rate, rather than magnitude, at which pCO2 enrichment occurs.

     

    Kamenos N. A., Burdett H. L., Aloisio E., Findlay H. S., Martin S., Longbone C., Dunn J., Widdicombe S. & Calosi P., in press. Coralline algal structure is more sensitive to rate, rather than the magnitude, of ocean acidification. Global Change Biology. Article.

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  • Effects on Scope for Growth due to elevated carbon dioxide in the copepod Calanus finmarchicus

    Effects on Scope for Growth due to elevated carbon dioxide in the copepod Calanus finmarchicus

    Published 20 August 2013 Science Leave a Comment
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    Cohorts of the keystone copepod species Calanus finmarchicus exposed to simulated ocean acidification environments were followed during the course of two consecutive generations. The time of development into the different molting stages were monitored. While the more moderate CO2 concentration (1080 ppm) did not seem to affect the development rate, a slower development into molting stages were found in the highest exposure groups (2080 – 3080 ppm CO2). Measurements of oxygen consumption and feeding rate in sub adult individuals (copepodite stage C5) were integrated into calculations of the overall energy balance (Scope for Growth) of the animals. Together with biometric measurements that were performed these results points to an energy depletion due chronic exposure of elevated CO2 as has been predicted for the future. This stage of Calanus finmarchicus seems to be tolerant to a more moderate CO2 elevation (1080ppm) over the time frame of this study.

     

    Håkedal O. J., 2013. Effects on Scope for Growth due to elevated carbon dioxide in the copepod Calanus finmarchicus. MSc thesis, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, 80 p. Thesis.

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  • A campaign sadly lacking in poetry and vision

    A campaign sadly lacking in poetry and vision

    Updated 2 hours 0 minutes ago

    Government is done in prose, but election campaigns should speak in poetry. Ahead of the second leaders’ debate in Brisbane, Terry Barnes laments that we have seen plenty of attack ads and pork barrelling, but no deeper conversation about our future.

    John Howard’s Coalition government deservedly lost to Kevin Rudd and Labor in the 2007 federal election.

    Right until the end, the Howard government was competent and efficient. Notwithstanding Peter Costello’s frustrated leadership ambitions, it remained united and disciplined as a team. Its policy and economic legacies not only were coveted by Rudd, but positively embraced by the then-self-described economic conservative.

    But the Howard government deserved to lose in 2007 because it demonstrated no other reason to seek re-election than to say “look at our record and don’t trust Labor”. Howard and his team, including current prime ministerial aspirant Tony Abbott, couldn’t convince enough Australians that they had a meaningful reason for retaining office other than that they held it. They simply offered more of the same, while Rudd was a fresh alternative who seemed a safe bet in good economic times. Unsurprisingly, enough swinging voters dismissed the Howard government as past it.

    Fast forward to 2013. At the half-way point of this election campaign, the messages of the major parties have crystallised. Abbott’s Coalition hammers that a divided, incompetent and destructive Labor government must go, now. Like Howard in 2007, the resurrected Rudd counters that if Abbott wins, Australians lose.

    Paul Keating’s political mentor Jack Lang famously asserted that “In the race of life, always back self-interest – at least you know it’s trying”.

    That’s why most major party policy announcements assume the question most on voters’ minds is “what’s in it for me?”. As Chris Berg noted on The Drum this week, the Coalition and Labor are steadily rolling out big, small and micro election policy and spending commitments that tick as many self-interest boxes as they can – especially in hotly-contested marginal seats that will decide the outcome. These range from the Coalition’s paid parental leave scheme and Labor’s hang on to Holden car plan, to local scout hall and sporting facility upgrades.

    This is potentially a change of government election, and changing a government truly changes the country. Yet what we’re not so far getting from either Labor or the Coalition is a deeper conversation about how they will change our nation, our society and their future beyond September 7.

    If Tony Abbott becomes prime minister, what sort of future Australia does he want to see, and how will he use his political power and the prestige of his high office to realise his vision? What higher principles and values will guide him? How will these translate to shaping social, economic and foreign policy that will drive Australia’s economy, society and place in the world not just for the next three years, but possibly the next three decades?

    And Kevin Rudd? Since regaining the Labor leadership in June, Rudd has offered little evidence that he’s used his wilderness years to reflect on shaping Australia and its future, as opposed to his own. Eschewing the policy achievements of the vanquished Julia Gillard, especially the Gonski education funding reforms and the National Disability Insurance Scheme, Rudd is reduced to throwing money at problems thrown up by Labor’s pollsters and focus groups. Like Howard in 2007, however, the so-called master campaigner is offering no coherent justification for another term of Labor beyond simply stoking fear of Abbott.

    Yet millions of Australians are yearning for more direction, vision and leadership on big issues that matter for our common future. Take immigration as just one example. Stopping the human misery of leaky boats overloaded with desperate asylum-seekers tops the political agenda, but it’s become the only part of the immigration challenge that matters. In the past three years, how much meaningful debate has there been about how many migrants we should accept, how many are needed to support an ageing population’s standard of living, what long-term population growth we can sustain with finite natural resources, and what is the best economic, skills and family migration mix for our nation? In truth, almost none.

    Governing is done in prose, but election campaigns should speak in poetry. They should be eloquent contests of ideas, higher purposes and values that give context to policies and funding commitments. Voters want politicians to have a vision of how to make the Australia our children will inherit happier, healthier, kinder and more prosperous, and want to know how leaders’ values and beliefs will guide them as they govern. Above all, we want inspiration – especially after the last three turgid political years.

    With the People’s Forum debate in Brisbane tonight, and the Coalition’s and Labor’s centrepiece policy launches coming up next week, Rudd and Abbott have golden opportunities to reframe this election in terms of higher aspirations, values and beliefs. They should not only bash the other side and (re-)announce their big ticket items, but tell us something of what drives them, how they’ll lead and how they’ll try to change our world for the better.  Above all, they should give us the confidence to vote for them and to trust their judgment.

    As John Howard’s demise in 2007 shows, seeking power for power’s sake is not enough. Australians want to know how their leaders will use that power, and that whoever wins will use it wisely and well.

    So Kevin and Tony, please give us some poetry.

    Terry Barnes is a freelance writer and former senior adviser to Liberal ministers, including Tony Abbott.

  • Sea ice area in the arctic is up significantly over last which was the record low of the satellite era.

    August 20: Arctic Update
    Posted: 08.20.2013 at 4:46 PM
    Karl Bohnak

    Chief Meteorologist

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    Sea ice area in the arctic is up significantly over last which was the record low of the satellite era.
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    How is the ice doing in the arctic?

    There has been a lot of interest in the arctic recently due to record-low ice extent.  The first record low of the satellite era (which began in 1979) was in 2007.  Then last year, the ice extent went even lower.  After the big melt in 2007, some scientists were warning of an ice-free arctic by 2013.  That prediction failed.  Arctic sea ice is up significantly from last year (Image 1 above).

     

    One of the reasons for less melt is the temperature.  The Danish Meteorological Institute has followed arctic temperature since 1958.  This year is the coldest summer on record (Image 2).  Since May, there has not been a day where the temperature went above the long-term normal.  Here is the link where you can compare temperatures to this year.  At the present time, all the reporting buoys on the ice have temperatures at or below freezing.  Even land areas have felt the chill.  Grise Fiord on Elsmere Island in Canada had the country’s first snow of the season this past weekend.

     

    This level of cold will not be felt here.  It will remain bound up over the arctic for the time being.  For us, the warm and humid spell could end with a bang over parts of the U.P. Wednesday as a fairly strong cool front sweeps through.  This cool down looks temporary, however.  It appears that more warmth and humidity will build as this upcoming weekend wears on.