Sunday, August 4, 2019

“Skandalopetra” : when in Greece, dive as the Greeks

“Skandalopetra” is freediving with a stone-plate (“petra”) as a ballast, which in turn is attached with a rope to the boat.
This method was used by Greek sponge-divers to descend to the ocean floor to collect sponges.
A few pulls on the rope by the freediver indicated to the Kolizeri (rope-guy on the boat) to bring him back to the surface.
Modern-day Skandalopetra as a sport is done in a bathing-suit and nose clip (and no sponges are involved). No wetsuit, mask or fins are allowed.
The biggest challenge?
The ever-present thermocline in Greek waters, as it hits you like a brick wall, and makes equalization a serious issue.
No wonder all the traditional sponge-divers had permanently damaged eardrums.
Sponge diving was mainly practiced in Kalymnos and Symi (both near Rhodes in the Aegean Sea).

Saturday, August 3, 2019

Rolex Fastnet Race 2019

2019 marks the 48th edition of biennial Rolex Fastnet Race.
Organised by the Royal Ocean Racing Club since 1925 and partnered by Rolex since 2001, the 605nm race is a classic examination of strategy and skill.
Attracting a mix of passionate Corinthians and professionals, this is offshore racing at its very best, with complex weather patterns and testing tidal currents to be negotiated.
For Rolex, this type of sailing challenge lies at the heart of its enduring six-decade-long support for the sport.

On Saturday, 3 August an intrepid fleet of 400 yachts will set sail from Cowes, on the south coast of the United Kingdom, bound for the Fastnet Rock off southern Ireland and the return. leg to the finish in Plymouth.
photo : Carlo Borlenghi

"Sea Fever: For Those in Peril" - Fastnet Race Disaster, 1979 from Hidden Picture Productions
This is a short extract from the 60' programme "For Those in Peril" that Jonathan directed for BBC4. First transmitted as part of the BBC's "Sea Fever" season, the film tells the story of the evolution of coastal rescue in the UK from the start of the 20th century.

 Royal Navy Honors 40th Anniversary of the Fastnet Race Rescue :
This extract tells the story of the Fastnet race disaster of 1979 (so 40 years ago) that launched the biggest maritime rescue operation since Dunkirk.
A freakish storm turned the Celtic Sea into a terrifying washing machine that tossed the 303 entrants about and killed 15 sailors.
This documentary is a tribute to the Royal Navy rescue crews and has a focus on Nick Ward's experience on the Holland Half Tonner Grimalken, and which is recounted in his book "Left for Dead".
The documentary includes some footage from the start of the infamous race, and look out for a shot of the top boat of the Admiral's Cup that year (of which the Fastnet Race was the series finale), the Peterson 39 Eclipse, just to windward of the star performer from the 1977 series, Imp.
You can also see the Irish yacht Golden Apple of the Sun being towed into Plymouth after she had lost her rudder in the storm.
Her crew were airlifted off the boat and she was recovered by the Royal Navy 20 hours after the storm's height.

Links :

Friday, August 2, 2019

Greenland is melting away before our eyes

Temperatures in the 49th state are rising twice as fast as the rest of the world, causing water levels to rise and endangering places of natural beauty.

From RollingStone by Eric Holthaus

“I have my fingers crossed for it not being washed away”

Amid an ongoing heat wave, new data show the Greenland ice sheet is in the middle of its biggest melt season in recorded history.
It’s the latest worrying signal climate change is accelerating far beyond the worst fears of even climate scientists.

 The heatwave that smashed high temperature records in five European countries a week back is now over Greenland, accelerating the melting of the island's ice sheet and causing massive ice loss in the Arctic.

The record-setting heat wave that sweltered northern Europe last week has moved north over the critically vulnerable Greenland ice sheet, triggering temperatures this week that are as much as 25 to 30 degrees Fahrenheit warmer than normal.
Weather models indicate Tuesday’s temperature may have surpassed 75 degrees Fahrenheit in some regions of Greenland, and a weather balloon launched near the capital Nuuk measured all-time record warmth just above the surface.
That heat wave is still intensifying, and is expected to peak on Thursday with the biggest single-day melt ever recorded in Greenland.
On August 1 alone, more than 12 billion tons of water will permanently melt away from the ice sheet and find its way down to the ocean, irreversibly raising sea levels globally.

A tweet from the Danish Meteorological Institute, the official weather service of Greenland, said “almost all the ice sheet, including Summit” measurably melted on Tuesday.
According to a preliminary estimate, that melt covered 87 percent of the ice sheet’s surface, which would be the second-biggest melt day in Greenland’s recorded history.
Separate weather monitoring equipment at Summit Camp at the top of the 10,000-foot-thick Greenland ice sheet confirmed the temperature briefly reached the melting point.

 This river is in West Greenland, close to the capital Nuuk.

Localization with the GeoGarage platform (DGA nautical chart)

Downhill, meltwater was seen dramatically streaming off the edge of the ice sheet in massive waterfalls.
Climate scientist Irina Overeem, who placed a meltwater monitoring station in western Greenland eight years ago, recorded a dramatic video of a rushing torrent of water.
In a comment posted on Twitter, she said “I have my fingers crossed for it not being washed away.” In an email to Rolling Stone, Overeem described the nature of life in Greenland these days: After recording that video, she spotted a warning of the major glacial water runoff on the announcement board of the main supermarket in the capital city.
A similar glacial flood in 2012 was so intense it washed away bridge.

Flying over Greenland last week, impressive huge rivers on the west coast.

Ice core records show melt days like these have happened only a handful of times in the past 1,000 years.
But, with the advent of human-caused climate change, the chances of these full-scale melt events happening are sharply increasing.

Even just a few decades ago, an event like this would have been unthinkable.
Now, island-wide meltdown days like this are becoming increasingly routine.
The ongoing melt event is the second time in seven years that virtually the entire ice sheet simultaneously experienced at least some melt.
The last was in July 2012, where 97 percent of the ice sheet simultaneously melted.

In the 1980s, wintertime snows in Greenland roughly balanced summertime melt from the ice sheet, and the conventional wisdom among scientists was that it might take thousands of years for the ice to completely melt under pressure from global warming.

 A satellite image shows melt ponds on the surface of the northeastern Greenland ice sheet on July 30.
(ESA/Sentinel-2)

That’s all changed now.

With a decade or two of hindsight, scientists now believe Greenland passed an important tipping point around 2003, and since then its melt rate has more than quadrupled.
This week alone, Greenland will lose about 50 billion tons of ice, enough for a permanent rise in global sea levels by about 0.1mm.
So far in July, the Greenland ice sheet has lost 160 billion tons of ice — enough to cover Florida in about six feet of water.
According to IPCC estimates, that’s roughly the level of melt a typical summer will have in 2050 under the worst-case warming scenario if we don’t take meaningful action to address climate change.
Under that same scenario, this week’s brutal, deadly heat wave would be normal weather in the 2070s.


This animated gif shows the mass Greenland's Jakobshavn Glacier has gained from 2016-17, 2017-18 and 2018-19.
Areas with the most growth — about 33 yards (30 meters) — are shown in dark blue.
Red areas represent thinning.
The images were produced using GLISTIN-A radar data as part of NASA's Ocean's Melting Greenland (OMG) mission.
More information on OMG can be found here: https://omg.jpl.nasa.gov/portal/.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech / NASA Earth Observatory
 Greenland's Jakobshavn Glacier

Xavier Fettweis, a polar scientist at the University of Liège in Belgium who tracks meltwater on the Greenland ice sheet, told Rolling Stone in an email that the recent acceleration of these melt events means the IPCC scenarios “clearly underestimate what we currently observe over the Greenland ice sheet” and should revisit their projections for the future.

“This melt event is a good alarm signal that we urgently need change our way of living,” said Fettweis.
“It is more and more likely that the IPCC projections are too optimistic in the Arctic.”
Altogether, the Greenland ice sheet contains enough ice to raise global sea levels by about 24 feet.

 Melt ponds in Western Greenland, active 2019 wildfire and 2017 wildfire burn scar (August 1, 2019)
Cpernicus sentinel-3
 courtesy of @Pierre_Markuse

Unusual wildfires across Siberia, Scandinavia, Alaska, and Greenland have been raging all summer, and by one estimate released about 50 million tons of carbon dioxide in the month of June alone — equivalent to the annual emissions of Sweden.
In Switzerland, some glaciers melted so rapidly during last week’s heatwave that they sent swirling mudflows racing downhill.
In the Arctic Ocean, sea ice is at a record-low extent as the melt season continues to lengthen.
In Alaska, ecosystems are rapidly changing, especially in the Bering Sea region where this year’s ice-free season began in February.

About 200 million tons of sediment enter the Sermilik Fjord in southwestern Greenland every year. Mining just some of it could make Greenland a major exporter of sand to the world.

As daunting as this is, the latest science on Greenland also points to a window of hope: Greenland’s meltdown is not yet irreversible.
That self-sustaining process of melt-begetting-more-melt would kick in at around 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius of global warming.
That means whether or not Greenland’s ice sheet melts completely is almost entirely in human control: A full-scale mobilization ­— including rapidly transforming the basis of the global economy toward a future where fossil fuels are no longer used — would probably be enough to keep most of the remaining ice frozen, where it belongs.

Links :

Thursday, August 1, 2019

New Zealand (Linz) update in the GeoGarage platform

21 nautical raster charts updated & 1 new chart added

Alaskan glaciers melting 100 times faster than previously thought

Tidewater glaciers, like this one in Alaska, experience underwater melting 100 times faster than scientists previously estimated from theoretical models.
Photograph by Jim Mone / AP

From National Geographic by Jenny Howard

Putting an old technology to novel use, scientists looked at how tidewater glaciers melt underwater.

Their results were startling.

A new way of measuring how some glaciers melt below the surface of the water has uncovered a surprising realization: Some glaciers are melting a hundred times faster than scientists thought they were.

In a new study published today in Science, a team of oceanographers and glaciologists unpeeled a new layer of understanding of tidewater glaciers—glaciers that end in the ocean—and their dynamic processes.

“They’ve really discovered that the melt that’s happening is fairly dramatically different from some of the assumptions we’ve had,” says Twila Moon, a glaciologist at the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado-Boulder who was uninvolved with the study.

Some of this calving and glacial melt is a normal process that glaciers undergo during seasonal transitions from winter to summer, and even through the summer.
But a warming climate accelerates glacier melting across the globe, potentially through melting across the surface of the glacier, but also through underwater melting.

Glaciers can extend hundreds of feet below the surface, explained Ellyn Enderlin, a glaciologist at Boise State University who was not involved with the study.
Finding higher rates of submarine melting tells us that “glaciers are a lot more sensitive to ocean change than we’ve even thought.” Understanding the melting processes and calculating the amount of melt accurately is essential for planning for sea level rise.

Watch an Alaskan glacier melt
In Seward, Alaska, Exit Glacier is melting at an astonishing rate.
This stunning short film examines the glacier’s dramatic impact through the voice of local guide Rick Brown.

“We are just super jazzed that we can even do this,” says lead author David Sutherland, an oceanographer at the University of Oregon.
“We weren’t 100 percent sure it was going to work.”

Monitoring specific glaciers for a long period of time can give researchers—and high school students—an idea of climate change-induced melting.
Students at Petersburg High School near LeConte Bay started collecting data about the position of the glacier’s terminus in 1983.
Their noting of the glacier’s retreat several years ago alerted scientists at the University of Alaska Southeast, piquing interest in better understanding melting at the glacier.

Glaciologist Elizabeth Case, of Lamont Earth, takes Scientific American
out near Juneau to study and live on the shifting ice.

Measuring melting masses of ice


LeConte was an ideal glacier to study because it is really accessible for a tidewater glacier, Sutherland said.
A complex environment, the project required so many lines of data that teams of oceanographers and glaciologists collected data simultaneously at the glacier.

Calculating how fast a glacier melts requires more finesse than measuring a melting ice cube in a glass of water.
With a glacier, you have to know how fast the ice moves into the fjord, as well as what proportion is melting and what proportion is breaking off, or calving.

It was “pretty simple in my head, and sounded good on paper,” laughs Sutherland.
But navigating a boat into the fjord, where the LeConte Glacier slips into the sea, is tricky on a good day.
Scientists spent weeks aboard the boat working 24 hours a day, with each scientist taking 12-hour shifts.

Mountain goats scrambled on ridges above and whales frequented the fjord, with seabirds dipping into the water.
“When you aren’t wishing for better weather…it was a pretty awesome place to be,” says Sutherland.

From the 80-foot MV Stellar, oceanographers performed sonar surveys underwater, like the ones used to measure ocean depths.
Instead of directing the sonar toward the ocean floor, though, they angled the sonar to collect the 3D underwater portion of the glacier face.

Oceanographers then had to know how quickly the sonar traveled through the fjord water to make accurate calculations.
Further “basic” measurements of water properties, like salinity and temperature, were necessary, Sutherland explained.
Dangling super-expensive instruments over the side of the boat could sometimes be tense.

Scientists repeated their observations during two summers, obtaining multiple scans each trip.
“To be able to scan an entire glacier face repeatedly over the summer is not easy,” says Eric Rignot, a glaciologist at the University of California, Irvine who was not involved with the study.

Too much ice in front of the glacier means “the boat can’t push through the ice,” says Rignot.
Sometimes that meant the boat suddenly had to retreat from the face of the glacier, while scientists crossed their fingers that the equipment wasn’t sheared off into the water.

Simultaneously, a team of glaciologists camped on a ridge overlooking the glacier.
They “babysat” a delicate radar instrument to measure the natural movement of the glacier.
Time-lapse cameras were used to measure glacier flow so that they knew how fast the ice moves toward the ocean, says Jason Amundson, a glaciologist and co-author of the study at University of Alaska Southeast.

Glacial ice accelerates as the ice approaches the front of the glacier, where it drops into the ocean, said Moon.
She compares the ice movement to squeezing a tube of toothpaste: Once your toothpaste gets to the very end, it doesn’t have any other toothpaste blocking its progress, so it moves more quickly.
Ice near the glacier face can move almost 75 feet per day and knowing this speed is essential to calculate melting.

From the datasets, researchers were able to calculate a total melting rate for the underwater portion of the glacier: two orders of magnitude higher than they expected.
Rignot said one of the theoretical models, used for 20-30 years, was known to be a simplified version that didn’t work perfectly.

Several processes of melting happen at a tidewater glacier, which is why scientists tackled the melting mystery from multiple angles.
If a big block of ice is sitting in a bathtub and nothing else is going on, it would just be melting at a background rate.

When a plume of freshwater from surface melt enters the fjord, it hits the fjord close to the glacier face.
The more buoyant freshwater rises to the surface and then undercuts, or erodes the glacier face.

And then you have this submarine melting that occurs wherever the ocean touches the surface of the glacier.
The really cool part of the new method, said Sutherland, is that you can pinpoint the exact location where higher melt occurs.

“A considerable amount of ice that gets pushed out into the ocean melts right there where it’s in contact with the ocean…so that glacier is actually losing a lot of mass due to that melting,” says Enderlin.
“A pretty large percentage of the ice that flows into the ocean is melted away by the warm ocean water,” says Amundson.

They calculated that the glacier melted underwater at a rate of almost 5 feet per day in May and up to 16 feet per day in August.
Later in the season, the warmer water increased the underwater melting.
Usually less than 6 degrees Celsius, water in LeConte Bay is warm relative to the ice, and even other fjords around the world.

Underwater melting of tidewater glaciers is occurring much faster than previously thought, according to a new study of the LeConte Glacier in Alaska.
Photo: NOAA

What about other glaciers?

The success of the new method “opens the door for researchers to do this all over the world,” says Sutherland.
Specifically, insight from the research at LeConte Glacier in Alaska could be used to study glaciers in Greenland and Antarctica.
“Submarine melting may matter everywhere,” says Enderlin.

Only 50 of approximately 100,000 glaciers in Alaska are tidewater glaciers, and they’re some of the biggest.
These “glaciers can change much more quickly than valley glaciers because of the processes that are happening right where the glacier flows into the ocean,” says Amundson.

Primarily a massive ice sheet, Greenland has about 200 outlet glaciers, but the water there is much colder compared to the temperature in LeConte Bay.


Alaskan glaciers primarily experience surface melt, since so few end in the ocean, said Rignot.
Greenland experiences surface melt as well as melting by tidewater glaciers.
But in Antarctica this submarine melting is the only type of ice melt, so understanding the processes outside Alaska are important.

If you turn the knob of climate up, like with climate change, says Sutherland, you increase the temperature of water and air and you will certainly get more melting.
That can be difficult to disentangle from natural melting, though.

“These observations pretty clearly show us that there are things that we’ve been missing,” says Moon.
“It’s a real call to action,” to better understand how these systems work.

Fortunately, scientists have some time to figure it out.
“These glaciers aren’t getting lost that fast…they’ll be around for decades to come,” says Sutherland.

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