An entire river in Canada vanished in four days due to climate change

The vast flowing Slims River in Canada vanished in just four days due
to climate change.

A vast river flowing from one Canada's largest glaciers vanished in
just four days last year, due to the glacier's meltdown propelled by
climate change.

Canada's Slims river which, according to a Guardian report, spanned up
to 150 metres at its widest points had been flowing for hundreds of
years, carrying water from the massive Kaskawulsh glacier.

Between 26 to 29 May 2016, spurred by a massive heat wave, the glacier
began melting at a much faster pace. The severe meltdown ended up
changing the flow of its water, which now started heading to the Gulf
of Alaska -- thousands of miles to the opposite of Slims river.

This dramatic effect of global warming was documented by team of
experts who had been following the glacier and its steady retreat.
There observations were published in the journal Nature on Monday.

"We went to the area intending to continue our measurements in the
Slims river, but found the riverbed more or less dry. The delta top
that we'd been sailing over in a small boat was now a dust storm. In
terms of landscape change it was incredibly dramatic," James Best, a
geologist at the University of Illinois, told Guardian.

These scientists are now calling this phenomenon a case of 'river
piracy' -- wherein the flow of one river is suddenly diverted into
another.

According to the report, "river piracy can dramatically change the
routing of water and sediment, with a profound effect on landscape
evolution." Experts also observed that though stream piracy has been
investigated in glacial environments in the past, it has usually
occurred over longer timescales.

In this case, however, Slims River was reduced to a thin stream in
mere four day, while the south-flowing Alsek river (where water from
Kaskawulsh glacier is now heading) became 60 to 70 times larger than
the Slims. Both rivers had earlier been comparable in size.

The report also noted how the effect of river piracy is not limited to
the immediately affected lake. In the case of Slims River, for
example, two other rivers that Slims flowed into -- the Kluane river
and the Yukon river -- have also been affected.

The biological effects of these rivers drying can be quite profound
for neighbouring ecosystems. Scientists have already recorded massive
sediment erosion in these areas, and are now worried about the long
term implications on surrounding human and biological communities.

Vishakha Saxena

 INDIATODAY.INTODAY.IN

-- 
Gopal Krishna
Web: www.toxicswatch.org, www.asbestosfreeindia.org

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