作者Dranoel (郭)
看板Oceanography
标题[新闻] Arctic current warmer than for 2,000 ys
时间Tue Feb 1 18:38:23 2011
北大西洋暖流(至少)两千年来最暖
来源网址:
http://tinyurl.com/4l8kdjr
(Reuters) - A North Atlantic current flowing into the Arctic Ocean is warmer
than for at least 2,000 years in a sign that global warming is likely to
bring ice-free seas around the North Pole in summers, a study showed.
Scientists said that waters at the northern end of the Gulf Stream, between
Greenland and the Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard, averaged 6 degrees
Celsius (42.80F) in recent summers, warmer than at natural peaks during Roman
or Medieval times.
"The temperature is unprecedented in the past 2,000 years," lead author
Robert Spielhagen of the Academy of Sciences, Humanities and Literature in
Mainz, Germany, told Reuters of the study in Friday's edition of the journal
Science.
The summer water temperatures, reconstructed from the makeup of tiny
organisms buried in sediments in the Fram strait, have risen from an average
5.2 degrees Celsius (41.36F) from 1890-2007 and about 3.4C (38.12F) in the
previous 1,900 years.
The findings were a new sign that human activities were stoking modern
warming since temperatures are above past warm periods linked to swings in
the sun's output that enabled, for instance, the Vikings to farm in Greenland
in Medieval times.
"We found that modern Fram Strait water temperatures are well outside the
natural bounds," Thomas Marchitto, of the University of Colorado at Boulder,
one of the authors, said in a statement.
The Fram strait is the main carrier of ocean heat to the Arctic.
ICE-FREE OCEAN
The authors wrote that the warming temperatures "are presumably linked to the
Arctic amplification of global warming" and that the warming "is most likely
another key element in the transition to a future ice-free Arctic Ocean."
Ice on the Arctic Ocean shrank to its lowest on record in 2007 and many
experts expect the ocean will be ice-free in summers in coming decades, a
threat to the hunting livelihoods of indigenous peoples and to creatures such
as polar bears.
The Arctic is heating up twice as fast as the global average as part of a
trend the U.N. panel of climate scientists blames on a build-up of greenhouse
gases from mankind's use of fossil fuels in power plants, factories and cars.
The shrinking of reflective ice and snow in the Arctic region exposes water
or ground which are darker colored and so soak up more heat from the sun,
amplifying warming.
(Editing by Ralph Boulton)
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※ 编辑: Dranoel 来自: 220.136.125.153 (02/01 18:39)