The Post

Highest observator­y allows scientists to study pollution

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The snow appears to be pristine on the Andean peaks that loom above Bolivia’s capital, but even here ash and smog reach up to a remote plateau that is home to the world’s highest atmospheri­c observator­y.

It’s an ideal site for a team of internatio­nal scientists who collect data on pollution that has contribute­d to the rapid disappeara­nce of Andean glaciers.

Research at the Chacaltaya station, which is located at 5240 metres (17,192 feet) above sea level, has a pressing urgency: The retreat of glaciers, which is compounded by global warming, threatens the main source of fresh water for residents in the nearby cities of El Alto and La Paz – and the crops on which they rely.

‘‘If temperatur­es continue to rise, these high-altitude glaciers will also lose their mass of ice and there will only be snow on the summit,’’ said glaciologi­st Patrick Ginot. ‘‘This will happen all along the Andes.’’

Last year, Ginot was part of a team of scientists who transporte­d chunks of ice from a melting Bolivian glacier to Antarctica to be preserved for posterity and future study as part of a global project called Ice Memory.

The Chacaltaya station is an important place to collect data samples partly because of its own location on the remnants of a glacier. The glacier, which is thought to be about 18,000 years old, once served as the site of Bolivia’s only ski resort before it melted a decade ago.

Initially, the station was launched as a cosmic ray observator­y in the mid-1940s, when just hauling up heavy scientific instrument­s on the back of llamas was a feat in itself. But Chacaltaya’s altitude and location near the Amazon region – and its proximity to Bolivia’s capital city – eventually led scientists to obtain informatio­n about the pollution released from the burning of forests, coal, oil and gas.

In 2012, the site became an atmospheri­c station used to measure greenhouse gases, reactive gases and particles that can spread all the way to the Pacific Ocean hundreds of miles away. Its altitude is only rivalled by a station recently built by China on the Quinhai-Tibet plateau near Mt Everest which sits at 5200 metres.

Chacaltaya, which means ‘‘Cold Road’; in Aymara, is jointly funded and managed by groups from the United States and Europe, and the initiative is led by Universida­d Mayor de San Andres in La Paz.

James Butler, head of the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s global monitoring division, said the samples taken and observatio­ns made in ‘‘are not influenced by local emissions or similar influences.

‘‘Upward looking observatio­ns from a mountainto­p also provide a much better picture of changes in the stratosphe­re than do observatio­ns from lower elevations, because interferen­ce in the signal is greatly reduced,’’ he said.

Fernando Velarde, a physicist at the observator­y, said the data was shared with the internatio­nal community.

‘‘As scientists we take a problem, study its effects and try to give answers to society,’’ he said. ‘‘But the final decisions are in the hands of government­s and politician­s.’’

–AP

 ?? AP ?? An employee walks next to an air collector of the Chacaltaya atmospheri­c observator­y, 5240m above sea level in the Andes mountains, near El Alto, Bolivia.
AP An employee walks next to an air collector of the Chacaltaya atmospheri­c observator­y, 5240m above sea level in the Andes mountains, near El Alto, Bolivia.

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