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Black carbon footprint of human presence in Antarctica

Raúl R. Cordero, Edgardo Sepúlveda, Sarah Féron, Alessandro Damiani, Francisco Fernandoy, Steven Neshyba, Penny M. Rowe, Valentina Asencio, Jorge Carrasco, Juan A. Alfonso, Pedro Llanillo, Paul Wachter, Günther Seckmeyer, M. V. Stepanova, Juan Manuel Carrera, José Jorquera, Chenghao Wang, Avni Malhotra, Jacob Dana, Alia L. Khan, Gino Casassa

2022Nature Communications86 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Black carbon (BC) from fossil fuel and biomass combustion darkens the snow and makes it melt sooner. The BC footprint of research activities and tourism in Antarctica has likely increased as human presence in the continent has surged in recent decades. Here, we report on measurements of the BC concentration in snow samples from 28 sites across a transect of about 2,000 km from the northern tip of Antarctica (62°S) to the southern Ellsworth Mountains (79°S). Our surveys show that BC content in snow surrounding research facilities and popular shore tourist-landing sites is considerably above background levels measured elsewhere in the continent. The resulting radiative forcing is accelerating snow melting and shrinking the snowpack on BC-impacted areas on the Antarctic Peninsula and associated archipelagos by up to 23 mm water equivalent (w.e.) every summer.

Topics & Concepts

SnowTransectSnowpackPhysical geographyEnvironmental scienceCarbon footprintArchipelagoRadiative forcingBiomass (ecology)PeninsulaShoreMediterranean climateOceanographyGeologyGeographyClimate changeGreenhouse gasGeomorphologyArchaeologyAtmospheric chemistry and aerosolsCryospheric studies and observationsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics
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