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Browsing by Author "Thompson, Lonnie G."
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Item Disappearance of the last tropical glaciers in the Western Pacific Warm Pool (Papua, Indonesia) appears imminent(National Academy of Sciences, 2019-12-26) Permana, Donaldi S.; Thompson, Lonnie G.; Mosley-Thompson, Ellen; Davis, Mary E.; Lin, Ping-Nan; Nicolas, Julien P.; Bolzan, John F.; Bird, Broxton W.; Mikhalenko, Vladimir N.; Gabrielli, Paolo; Zagorodnov, Victor; Mountain, Keith R.; Schotterer, Ulrich; Hanggoro, Wido; Habibie, Muhammad N.; Kaize, Yohanes; Gunawan, Dodo; Setyadi, Gesang; Susanto, Raden D.; Fernández, Alfonso; Mark, Bryan G.; Earth Sciences, School of ScienceThe 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.Item Late-Holocene Indian summer monsoon variability revealed from a 3300-year-long lake sediment record from Nir’pa Co, southeastern Tibet(Sage, 2017-04) Bird, Broxton W.; Lei, Yanbin; Perello, Melanie; Polissar, Pratigya J.; Yao, Tandong; Finney, Bruce; Bain, Daniel; Pompeani, David; Thompson, Lonnie G.; Earth Science, School of ScienceSedimentological and geochemical results from Nir’pa Co, an alpine lake on the southeastern Tibetan Plateau, detail late-Holocene Indian summer monsoon (ISM) hydroclimate during the last 3300 years. Constrained by modern calibration, elevated silt and lithics and low sand and clay between 3.3 and 2.4 ka and 1.3 ka and the present indicate two pluvial phases with lake levels near their current overflow elevation. Between 2.4 and 1.3 ka, a sharp increase in sand and corresponding decrease in lithics and silt suggest drier conditions and lower lake levels at Nir’pa Co. Hydroclimate expressions in the sedimentological proxies during the Medieval Climate Anomaly (MCA) and ‘Little Ice Age’ (LIA) are not statistically significant, suggesting that these events were minor compared to the millennial scale variability on which they were superimposed. However, decreasing sand and increasing lithics and silt during the MCA between 950 and 800 cal. yr BP may suggest briefly wetter conditions, while increasing sand and reduced lithics and silt from 500 to 200 cal. yr BP suggest potentially drier conditions during the LIA. Similarities with regional records from lake sediment and ice cores and speleothem records from the central and eastern Tibetan Plateau, India, and the Arabian Sea, suggest generally coherent late-Holocene ISM variability in these regions. Increased late-Holocene ISM intensity occurred during times when Tibetan Plateau surface air temperatures were warmer, Indo-Pacific sea surface temperatures were elevated, and the tropical Pacific was in a La Niña–like mean state. Conversely, aridity between 2.4 and 1.3 ka occurred in concert with cooling on the Tibetan Plateau and in the Indo-Pacific with more El Niño–like conditions in the tropical Pacific. Differences with western Tibetan records may reflect a weakened ISM and stronger westerlies in this region during the late-Holocene.Item Stable isotopes of river water and groundwater along altitudinal gradients in the High Himalayas and the Eastern Nyainqentanghla Mountains(Elsevier, 2017-12-01) Florea, Lee; Bird, Broxton W.; Lau, Jamie K.; Wang, Lixin; Lei, Yanbin; Yao, Tandong; Thompson, Lonnie G.; Earth Science, School of ScienceStudy Region This study considers river water and groundwater in seeps and springs collected from the non-monsoon season in the valleys of the Dudh Koshi River in eastern Nepal and the Niyang River of eastern Tibet, both in the Himalaya Mountains. Study Focus Data from this study comprise water samples that provide a single season snapshot of δ18O and δD values that give additional information into the sources of moisture and the altitude lapse rates for the southern flank of the High Himalaya of Nepal and the Eastern Nyainqentanghla Mountains of the Tibetan Plateau. New Hydrological Insights The local water line for Nepal samples, δD=(7.8±0.3) · δ18O + (4.0‰±4.6‰), was moderately lower in slope than for Tibetan Plateau samples, δD=(8.7±0.1) · δ18O + (24.3‰±2.0‰); evaporation has a greater influence on the Nepal samples—consistent with warmer temperatures in Nepal versus Tibet within the same altitude range. Mean d-excess values for Tibet samples (13.1‰±2.0‰) implies that recycled continental moisture has more influence than marine moisture observed for the Nepal samples (7.4‰±4.4‰). Altitude lapse rates of δ18O and δD for Nepal samples (-2.8‰‰km−1 and −24.0‰km−1) do not significantly differ from Tibet samples (−3.1‰‰km−1 and −27.0‰km−1) and regional measurements; the lapse rates are reduced above 4500m and are not influenced by exceptionally high elevations in the Dudh Koshi River watershed.