Phys.org December 17, 2024 Human-induced climate change, and other human activities in Antarctica and the Southern Ocean region are leading to several potential interacting tipping points with major and irreversible consequences. An international team of researchers (UK, Australia) examined eight potential physical, biological, chemical, and social Antarctic tipping points – Ice sheets, Ocean acidification, Ocean circulation, Species redistribution, Invasive species, Permafrost melting, Local pollution, and the Antarctic Treaty System. They discussed the nature of each potential tipping point, its control variables, thresholds, timescales, and impacts, and focused on the potential for cumulative and cascading effects because of their interactions. Their […]
Tag Archives: Antarctic climate
Trace gases from ocean are source of particles accelerating Antarctic climate change
Phys.org May 13, 2021 An international team of researchers (UK, Spain, Saudi Arabia) studied the summertime open ocean and coastal new particle formation in the Antarctic Peninsula region based on both ship and station measurements. The rates of particle formation relative to sulfuric acid concentrations, as well as the sulfuric acid dimer-to-monomer ratios, were similar to those seen for sulfuric acid–dimethylamine–water nucleation. Numerous sulfuric acid–amine peaks were identified during new particle formation events, providing evidence that alkylamines were the bases that facilitated sulfuric acid nucleation. Most new particle formation events occurred in air masses arriving from the ice-covered Weddell Sea […]