Community | October 15, 2009 | 10 comments

Toxic legacy seeps from melting Alpine glaciers

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JanforGore
Swiss researchers have found that Alpine glaciers melting under the impact of climate change are releasing highly toxic pollutants that had been absorbed by the ice for decades.

They warned in a study abstract published in the journal Environmental Science and Technology that it could have a "dire environmental impact" on "pristine mountain areas" as global warming accelerates.

Much of the pollution was dumped on Europe's biggest mountain range by atmospheric currents from further afield, according to the researchers at three Swiss scientific institutes.

Their study of layers of sediment from an Alpine lake formed by a hydroelectric dam built in central Switzerland in 1953 revealed "sharp" build-ups of now banned chemical compounds from industry and farming, including dioxins and pesticides like DDT.

"We can confirm with the help of these layers that, in the 1960s and 1970s, POPs (Persistant Organic Pollutants) were produced in great quantities and were also deposited in this Alpine lake," said one of the authors, Christian Bogdal, of the Swiss Federal Laboratory for Materials Testing and Research.

But while the concentration of POPs fell after the 1970s as many of those compounds were banned, the scientists found an unusual resurgence in more recent sediment from the past 10 to 15 years.

They concluded that the lake, the Oberaarsee, was largely fed by water from a nearby melting glacier that was releasing pollutants at a level comparable to when the compounds were still in use.

"At this stage our study indicates that accelerated glacier melting due to global warming may also account for enhanced release of legacy organic pollutants at historically high levels," according to the full study.

One of the scientists, Peter Schmid, told AFP on Wednesday that their findings were replicated at two other glacial lakes in the Swiss Alps.

But another lake that was not fed by glaciers did not show any increase in the compounds.

The authors said that that it was the first time that glaciers were demonstrated to be a secondary source of such pollution.

Production and use of POPs was banned or restricted under an international treaty in 2001, although several major industrialised nations such as the United States had started to outlaw them in preceding decades.

They are regarded as very durable and carcinogenic, and in some instances can be absorbed through the skin.

Their release in an Alpine setting could lead to "short but intense pulses" of pollution in spring and summer, the scientists concluded.

That could affect drinking water in Alpine huts, the food chain through fish from nearby lakes, irrigation facilities and even artificial snow on ski slopes.
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    Climate Change POPs glacier melting Alpines
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10 comments // Toxic legacy seeps from melting Alpine glaciers

  • csmonut
    • 0
      csmonut  
    • Seajade,
      There is no where to go for fresh air anymore.
      A few weeks ago I drove up the 99 freeway in central California, from Bakersfield to Sacramento.
      I was appalled at how thick the air pollution had become since I was young.
      However, I understand that CA is experiencing air pollution from as far away as China. let alone what is produced right there.
      I have noticed how the air pollution is getting into the valley where I now live in Nevada, just within the last 5 years, and we have no traffic to speak of, nor do we have any industry.
      Not surprising that all that crap is in glaciers. Reaping what we have sown....yep.

    • 2 years ago
  • SeaJade
    • 0
      SeaJade  
    • We used to go out to the country for a bit of fresh air, but where do we go today? Another serious unspoken - amongst all the other toxins laying about in otherwise pristine areas, where does all the depleted uranium go?

    • 2 years ago
  • JanforGore
    • 0
      JanforGore  
    • Yes, and we don't even know what else will come up with the methane being released from melting ice that has been there for years. It isn't jus about climate balance.

    • 2 years ago
  • carmalite
    • 0
      carmalite  
    • The results of global warming are not even known in full yet. Its not just flooding and melting sea ice but evidently from this article, its much more.

    • 2 years ago
  • futuregen
  • Denica_Cassandra
  • twohawks
    • 0
      twohawks  
    • Denica_test:

      Hmmm, what would the lemonaide look like ...?
      The opportunity would be if we could think up and produce some sort of "attractor" (substance or method) to draw the pollutants out of the mediums (water and air) as it is being re-released ...and then deal with our mess.

    • 2 years ago
  • JanforGore
  • ampersand
    • 0
      ampersand  
    • Wow. Indisputably, what goes around, comes around.
      I guess this rules out Switzerland as a pristine redoubt during the great climate collapse.

    • 2 years ago
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