Baffin Island reveals dramatic scale of Arctic climate change

Study delves back into 200,000 years of history to demonstrate the devastating 
impact of global
 warming

By Steve Connor, Science Editor

Tuesday, 20 October 2009

London's Independent


A frozen lake on a remote island off Canada's northern coast has yielded 
remarkable insights into how the Arctic climate has changed dramatically over 
50 years.

Muddy sediment from the bottom of the lake, some of it 200,000 years old, shows 
that Baffin Island, one of the most inhospitable places on Earth, has undergone 
an unprecedented warming over the past half-century. Scientists believe 
the temperature rise is probably due to human-induced warming. It has more than 
offset a natural cooling trend which began 8,000 years ago.

Instead of cooling at a rate of minus 0.2C every 1,000 years - a trend that was 
expected to continue for another 4,000 years because of well-known changes to 
the Earth's solar orbit - Baffin Island, like the rest of the Arctic, has begun 
to get warmer, especially since 1950. The Arctic is now about 1.2C warmer than 
it was in 1900, confirming that the region is warming faster than most other 
parts of the world.

Baffin Island, the largest island in the Arctic Canadian Archipelago, is 
subjected to prevailing northerly winds that keep average temperatures at about 
minus 8.5C, well below similar Arctic locations at a comparable latitude. Polar 
bears, arctic fox and arctic hares walk the island's territory while narwhal, 
walrus and beluga whale patrol its coastline.

The island is dotted with lakes, the bottoms of which have been periodically 
scoured by glaciers with each passing ice age. However, scientists have found 
that the sediments at the bottom of some of the lakes, which build up each year 
rather like tree rings, have survived this scouring process intact.

This has enabled the scientists to take core samples going back tens of 
thousands of years.
 One such lake on Baffin Island, known as CF8, has been found to have layers of 
sediment dating back 200,000 years, which makes it the oldest lake sediment 
bored from any glaciated parts of Canada or Greenland, according to the study 
published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

It is the CF8 lake that has provided scientists with the sediment core showing 
the unprecedented warming of Baffin Island over the past few decades, compared 
with a time span going back 200,000 years, a period which included two ice ages 
and three interglacial periods - and roughly the time that Homo sapiens has 
been on earth.

"The past few decades have been unique in the past 200,000 years in terms of 
the changes we see in the biology and chemistry recorded in the cores," said 
Yarrow Axford of the University of Colorado at Boulder. "We see clear evidence 
for warming in one of the most remote places on earth at a time when the Arctic 
should be cooling because of natural processes." The scientists found that 
certain cold-adapted organisms in the layers of sediment have decreased in 
frequency since about 1950. Larvae from species of Arctic midge, which only 
live in cold conditions, have abruptly declined and two species in particular 
have disappeared altogether.

Meanwhile, a species of lake alga or diatom that is better suited to warmer
 conditions has increased significantly over the same period, indicating longer 
periods when the lake's surface was free of ice, the scientists said. Other 
sediment measurements support a dramatic reversal of the natural cooling trend, 
they said.

As part of a 21,000-year cycle, the Arctic has been receiving progressively 
less summertime energy from the Sun for the past 8,000 years because of a 
well-established "wobble" in the Earth's solar rotation - the Earth is now 0.6 
million miles further from the Sun during an Arctic summer solstice than it was 
in 1BC. This decline will not reverse for another 4,000 years, but changes to 
the climate of Baffin Island show that the cooling it should have caused has 
gone into reverse in the past few decades.
A separate team of scientists analysing Arctic lakes in Alaska found a similar 
warming trend in recent years compared to sediment records going back a few 
thousand years. They, too, concluded that the warming was unprecedented and 
could be explained by human activities, namely the build of man-made carbon
 dioxide in the atmosphere.

"The amount of energy we're getting from the Sun in the 20th century continued 
to go down, but the temperature went up higher than anything we've seen in the 
last 2,000 years," said Nicholas McKay of the University of Arizona in Tucson .

"The 20th century is the first century for which how much energy we're getting 
from the Sun is no longer the most important thing governing the temperature of 
the Arctic," said Dr McKay, when the study was published last month in the 
journal Science.

Baffin Island: An ancient trading post

*Baffin Island lies between Greenland and the northern
 coast of Canada and, for all its remoteness and inhospitable climate, it may 
have played an important role as a staging post on the first-ever transatlantic 
trade route.

Archaeologists have found wooden items and a length of yarn at Nunguvik in the 
south which they believe indicate that visiting Vikings were interacting with 
the local natives, known as the Dorset people, who lived on Baffin Island 
between 500BC and AD1500.

The scientists believe that the Dorset, who dressed in animal skins, did not 
know how to spin yarn, unlike the Vikings. The three-metre strand, found frozen 
in the tundra, was spun from arctic hare fur mixed with goat hair, similar to 
yarn found at Viking settlements on Greenland. There are no goats on Baffin 
Island.

Further evidence comes from one of the wooden carvings which shows two faces 
chin to chin. One has the features of indigenous North Americans, whose 
ancestors had an Asian origin, while the other shows a long, narrow face and 
nose with a heavy beard - a portrait perhaps of a visiting Viking.

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