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Coal mine dust accelerates snow melt in the Arctic
by Brooks Hays
Boulder, Colo. (UPI) Feb 1, 2017


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

According to a new study, dust expelled by a coal mine in Svalbard, Norway, encourages snow and ice melt in the Arctic. The spectral reflectance of nearby snow was reduced 84 percent by the presence of dust.

Researchers measured the albedo, the reflecting power of a surface, of snow samples collected at four sites on the Arctic island. Each sample site was a different distance from the mine.

In calculating the diffuse reflectivity of each snow sample, scientists accounted for other factors, like snow grain size. Their findings -- detailed in the Journal of Geophysical Research -- showed a significant reduction in the albedo of snow samples within the immediate vicinity of the coal mine.

Darker snow and ice absorbs more solar energy, retains heat and melts faster.

Researchers suggest their numbers can be used to predict the effects of dust and soot on snow with satellite images and computer models.

"The extreme contrast between snow and dust at this particular site gave us a baseline to develop algorithms that we can now use to take future measurements in areas that aren't easily accessible," Alia Khan, a post-doctoral researcher at the University of Colorado, Boulder, said in a news release.

Future measurements could be used to calculate the environmental risks of energy production ventures in the Arctic.

"We hope these ground-based spectral measurements could be used in the management of future energy development in the Arctic, especially for mines that may be unavailable for ground-based observations, but may be large enough to be visible by satellite," said Khan.


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Salt Lake City UT (SPX) Jan 24, 2017
When spring comes to the Arctic, the breakup of the cold winter ice sheets starts at the surface with the formation of melt ponds. These pools of melted snow and ice darken the surface of the ice, increasing the amount of solar energy the ice sheet absorbs and accelerating melt. A team including University of Utah mathematician Kenneth Golden has determined how these melt ponds form, solvi ... read more


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