PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Meltwater from Tibetan glaciers floods pastures

2014-01-16
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Dr. Tobias Bolch
tobias.bolch@geo.uzh.ch
41-446-355-236
University of Zurich
Meltwater from Tibetan glaciers floods pastures Glaciers are important indicators of climate change. Global warming causes mountain glaciers to melt, which, apart from the shrinking of the Greenlandic and Antarctic ice sheets, is regarded as one of the main causes of the present global sea-level rise. Tibet's glaciers are also losing mass clearly, as scientists from the universities of Zurich, Tubingen and Dresden reveal using satellite-based laser measurements. Over the last decade, the research team has detected a "clear loss in mass of around 16 gigatons a year in around 80 percent of the Tibetan glaciers," says Tobias Bolch, a glaciologist from the University of Zurich involved in the study – that's more than four times the volume of water in Lake Zurich and around six percent of the total loss in mass of all the glaciers on Earth.

Some glaciers in Tibet are growing

However, the measurements also bore some positive news: Some glaciers in the central and north-western part of the Tibetan Plateau have actually grown in mass. While the glaciers in the monsoon-influenced southern and eastern part of the plateau have melted significantly, the scientists recorded a neutral or even slightly positive result in the continental central and north-western area of the country. Nonetheless, as Bolch notes, "On average, the entire region is clearly characterized by a loss in mass."

At a first glance, the evidence that not all of the meltwater flows into the ocean via the large Asian currents and causes the sea level to rise seems positive. "However, flooding is still a problem," says Bolch. After all, a large proportion of the melt – around two gigatons a year, as scientists have quantified for the first time – flows into lakes without an outlet on the plateau, causing them to burst their banks. "In many regions, this means that valuable pasture areas become submerged," explains the glaciologist.

Precise results thanks to a combined measuring technique

Stretching over an area of around 40,000 square kilometers, the Tibetan Plateau's glaciers account for over a third of High Asia's ice cover and are about twenty times the size of the ice surface of the Alps. For their study, the international team of researchers evaluated satellite-based laser measurements of the glacier surfaces on the Tibetan Plateau between 2003 and 2009. "Thanks to these measurements, we were able to gauge the temporal changes of the glacier heights and – combined with a detailed glacier inventory – changes in mass of the glaciers in Tibet, which are extremely difficult to access," say Tubingen scientists Niklas Neckel and Jan Kropacek, explaining the measuring technique.

The results now published in Environmental Research Letters seem to contradict the data from a satellite mission based on other measuring methods, which indicates a slight increase in mass in the glacier ice for an almost identical period of time. For Bolch, the different measurement values depend on the amounts of meltwater that remain on the plateau and do not flow away into the sea – and which his team has now managed to measure accurately for the first time. He attributes the data from the other studies that points to glacial growth more to other influences on the calculations – such as an increase in rainfall.

### Literature: Niklas Neckel, Jan Kropacek, Tobias Bolch and Volker Hochschild. Glacier mass changes on the Tibetan Plateau 2003 – 2009 derived from ICESat laser altimetry measurements. Environmental Research Letters. January 16, 2014


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Typhoid fever -- A race against time

2014-01-16
Typhoid fever -- A race against time The life-threatening disease typhoid fever results from the ongoing battle between the bacterial pathogen Salmonella and the immune cells of the body. Prof. Dirk Bumann's research group at the Biozentrum of the University of Basel has ...

Stem cells overcome damage in other cells by exporting mitochondria

2014-01-16
Stem cells overcome damage in other cells by exporting mitochondria

EU could cut emissions by 40 percent at moderate cost

2014-01-16
EU could cut emissions by 40 percent at moderate cost This is a key finding from an international multi-model analysis by the Stanford Energy Modeling Forum (EMF28) and comes at a crucial time, as the European Commission is set ...

Discovery of quantum vibrations in 'microtubules' corroborates theory of consciousness

2014-01-16
Discovery of quantum vibrations in 'microtubules' corroborates theory of consciousness Amsterdam, January 16, 2014 – A review and update of a controversial 20-year-old theory of consciousness published in Physics of Life Reviews claims that consciousness derives from ...

Loss of biodiversity limits toxin degradation

2014-01-16
Loss of biodiversity limits toxin degradation You might not think of microbes when you consider biodiversity, but it turns out that even a moderate loss of less than 5% of soil microbes may compromise some key ecosystem functions and could lead to lower degradation of toxins in ...

Silver nanowire sensors hold promise for prosthetics, robotics

2014-01-16
Silver nanowire sensors hold promise for prosthetics, robotics North Carolina State University researchers have used silver nanowires to develop wearable, multifunctional sensors that could be used in biomedical, military or athletic applications, including ...

Researchers 'detune' a molecule

2014-01-16
Researchers 'detune' a molecule Rice University experiment shows how to soften atomic bonds in a buckyball Rice University scientists have found they can control the bonds between atoms in a molecule. The molecule in question is carbon-60, also known as the buckminsterfullerene ...

Waterfowl poisoning halved by lead shot prohibition

2014-01-16
Waterfowl poisoning halved by lead shot prohibition Lead shot was forbidden in 2001 in Spanish wetlands on the Ramsar List of these areas of international importance. Ten years later, this prohibition -and the consequent use of steel shot ...

Novel technology reveals aerodynamics of birds flying in a V-formation

2014-01-16
Novel technology reveals aerodynamics of birds flying in a V-formation Researchers using custom-built GPS and accelerometer loggers, developed with funding from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, (EPSRC), ...

The way to a chimpanzee's heart is through its stomach

2014-01-16
The way to a chimpanzee's heart is through its stomach Chimpanzees who share their food with others have higher levels of the hormone oxytocin in their urine This news release is available in German. The ability to form long-term cooperative relationships ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

UVA’s Jundong Li wins ICDM’S 2025 Tao Li Award for data mining, machine learning

UVA’s low-power, high-performance computer power player Mircea Stan earns National Academy of Inventors fellowship

Not playing by the rules: USU researcher explores filamentous algae dynamics in rivers

Do our body clocks influence our risk of dementia?

Anthropologists offer new evidence of bipedalism in long-debated fossil discovery

Safer receipt paper from wood

Dosage-sensitive genes suggest no whole-genome duplications in ancestral angiosperm

First ancient human herpesvirus genomes document their deep history with humans

Why Some Bacteria Survive Antibiotics and How to Stop Them - New study reveals that bacteria can survive antibiotic treatment through two fundamentally different “shutdown modes”

UCLA study links scar healing to dangerous placenta condition

CHANGE-seq-BE finds off-target changes in the genome from base editors

The Journal of Nuclear Medicine Ahead-of-Print Tip Sheet: January 2, 2026

Delayed or absent first dose of measles, mumps, and rubella vaccination

Trends in US preterm birth rates by household income and race and ethnicity

Study identifies potential biomarker linked to progression and brain inflammation in multiple sclerosis

Many mothers in Norway do not show up for postnatal check-ups

Researchers want to find out why quick clay is so unstable

Superradiant spins show teamwork at the quantum scale

Cleveland Clinic Research links tumor bacteria to immunotherapy resistance in head and neck cancer

First Editorial of 2026: Resisting AI slop

Joint ground- and space-based observations reveal Saturn-mass rogue planet

Inheritable genetic variant offers protection against blood cancer risk and progression

Pigs settled Pacific islands alongside early human voyagers

A Coral reef’s daily pulse reshapes microbes in surrounding waters

EAST Tokamak experiments exceed plasma density limit, offering new approach to fusion ignition

Groundbreaking discovery reveals Africa’s oldest cremation pyre and complex ritual practices

First breathing ‘lung-on-chip’ developed using genetically identical cells

How people moved pigs across the Pacific

Interaction of climate change and human activity and its impact on plant diversity in Qinghai-Tibet plateau

From addressing uncertainty to national strategy: an interpretation of Professor Lim Siong Guan’s views

[Press-News.org] Meltwater from Tibetan glaciers floods pastures