New Zealand Local Weather Forum
Weather Discussion => International => Topic started by: Mark on December 07, 2012, 08:40:16 AM
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Suresh Sharma, TNN Dec 3, 2012, 05.46AM IST
MANALI: With high-altitude mountains in Himachal Pradesh experiencing up to 100 cm fresh snowfall in November month after 10 years, the abundance of snow on mountains has rejuvenated nearly one thousand glaciers and has ensured uninterrupted supply of water for drinking, irrigation and hydel projects.
Even after years of research on glaciers and climate of Himalayas, scientists have failed to learn the pattern of the weather here. While scanty snowfall and rising temperature in last decade had sparked the possibilities of fast shrinking of glaciers, good spells of snowfall in last three years have changed the trend with glaciers almost growing to their original size. Some scientists say that despite heavy snowfall in winters, the extreme heat in summers is causing the melting of the glaciers with abnormal speed and others say extreme cold in winters is neutralizing the minor effect of risen temperature in summer. Overall, speed of melting of glaciers has reduced over the past few years only due to good snowfall in winter months.
http://articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2012-12-03/india/35569707_1_bara-shigri-glaciers-snowfall
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really?
I thought it would take years before the snow showed up in the increase in size
the South island glaciers are some of the fastest...but yet I understand there is like a 30 year delay...
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Thanks Mark for such an interesting article. Pleased to see that glaciers will get back to normal again and that the scientists have learned from it.
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I'm going to check that source - sounds dubious.
Edit: Not good enough. Purely anecdotal, no scientific evidence at all cited. And the last sentence contradicts the intended inference of the rest of the story. The fact that it is linked to by a clearly right-wing Republican-style climate change "denier" site only suggests to me that like 99.999% of everything else such sites quote, it will turn out to have no foundation in fact.
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Chipping through 100 t0 120 feet (30 – 36 meters) of snow.
Members of the General Reserve Engineering Force (GREF), a wing of the Border Roads Organisation, are slowly cutting their way through 100 to 120 feet of snow, working to reopen traffic through the snow-marooned Rohtang Pass located at 3,978 metres in the Pir Panjal mountain range.
According to Col. Yogesh Nair, commander of the 38 Task Force of GREF , there was record snowfall in the region this season and the snow-clearing operation is a herculean task.
“The road stretch near Rohtang Pass is under 100 to 120 feet of snow. Unusually high. It normally experiences 70 to 80 feet of snow. We will try to reopen the Manali-Keylong highway by April-end,” he said.
Every year, after winter, GREF opens the Manali-Rohtang-Keylong highway by deploying more than 250 personnel and labourers.
With the help of global positioning system, engineers locate the road beneath the hill of the snow. After a bulldozer clears off the major snow, labourers manually clear the remaining snow with shovels.
Residents of two dozen small and scattered villages with a population of over 20,000 in the Lahaul valley are eagerly awaiting restoration of the road traffic.
“Since late last December, we have been cut off from the rest of the world. We are awaiting reopening of roads,” Mohan Bodh, a resident of Chokhang village in Lahaul, told IANS.
http://www.daijiworld.com/news/news_disp.asp?n_id=166145