Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rising temperatur­es, dwindling rainfall threaten Yosemite ice masses

- LOUIS SAHAGUN

LOS ANGELES — Climate change is taking a visible toll on Yosemite National Park, where the largest ice mass in the park is in a death spiral, geologists say.

During an annual trek to the glacier deep in Yosemite’s backcountr­y last month, Greg Stock, the park’s full-time geologist, found that Lyell Glacier had shrunk visibly since his visit last year, continuing a trend that began more than a century ago.

Lyell has dropped 62 percent of its mass and lost 120 vertical feet of ice over the past 100 years. “We give it 20 years or so of existence — then it’ll vanish, leaving behind rocky debris,” Stock said.

The Sierra Nevada Mountains have about 100 remaining glaciers, two of them in Yosemite. Great ice sheets are dwindling, prompting concerns about what will happen to surroundin­g ecological systems after perennial rivulets of melted ice disappear.

“We’ve looked at glaciers in California, Colorado, Wyoming, Washington and elsewhere, and they’re all thinning because of warming temperatur­es and less precipitat­ion,” said Andrew Fountain, professor of geology and geography at Portland State University in Oregon. “This is the beginning of the end of these things.”

If carbon-dioxide levels continue to rise, the earth will eventually become ice-free, according to a study by Ken MacLeod, a professor of geological sciences at the University of Missouri, published in the October issue of the journal Geology.

Yosemite’s other glacier, Maclure, is also shrinking, but it remains alive and continues to creep at a rate of about an inch a day.

Lyell, however, hasn’t budged. It is the second-largest glacier in the Sierra Nevada and the headwater of the Tuolumne River watershed, but it no longer fits the definition of a glacier because it has ceased moving.

“Lyell Glacier is stagnant — a clear sign it’s dying,” Stock said. “Our research indicates it stopped moving about a decade ago.”

Future research projects will attempt to use climate shifts chronicled in the widths of tree rings in nearby forests to create computer models that will show the shrinkage of Yosemite’s glaciers over the past 300 years — and help predict when they will disappear entirely.

Scientists also want to know why Lyell has stopped moving when Maclure, which is half the size it was a century ago, continues to advance at the same rate it did when naturalist John Muir and his friend Galen Clark hammered wooden stakes into its icy crust in 1872 to prove that glaciers are “living” because they move and alter the landscape.

“Glaciers tend to flow like honey down a plate, or slide over meltwater beneath them,” Stock said. “We suspect Lyell just isn’t thick enough anymore to drive a downhill motion.”

Overall, “the rate of glacier retreat has accelerate­d since about 2000,” Stock said. “Eventually, there will be nothing left.”

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