Tag Archives: zone

Super Nintendo World’s Donkey Kong zone may already be under construction

Super Nintendo World, the Super Mario-themed area of Universal Studios Japan in Osaka, finally opened back in March after multiple delays, and Nintendo may already be working on expanding the park. As noted by VGC, social media posts from recent visitors to USJ have shown cranes, scaffolding, and a jungle-themed backdrop around Super Nintendo World, suggesting work is underway on the rumored Donkey Kong area.

Neither Nintendo nor Universal have ever announced the Donkey Kong plans, but they’ve been rumored for many years. Leaked early concept imagery for Super Nintendo World included plans for a separate Donkey Kong-themed zone, including a mine cart-style roller coaster. Upon opening, Super Nintendo World was solely Mario-themed, but there is a conspicuously large locked door (above) that looks like it could serve as an entrance to a Donkey Kong-styled section of the park. DK assets have also been datamined from the USJ app, hinting at the addition of extra in-park collectibles.

Donkey Kong is a natural fit for the existing Super Nintendo World park. Mario first appeared in the original Donkey Kong arcade game, of course, and Donkey Kong in turn shows up in games like Mario Kart and the various Mario-themed sports series. As such, the addition shouldn’t compromise the feeling that Super Nintendo World is one cohesive park. However, it does mean that the park isn’t really covering the full breadth of Nintendo’s IP, with some omissions like The Legend of Zelda feeling particularly obvious.

Universal also plans to open Nintendo areas at its parks in Hollywood, Orlando, and Singapore, but it’s yet to be confirmed when construction on any of them will be completed.

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Germany’s Angela Merkel faces questions over flood response as she visits disaster zone

German officials were on Tuesday under growing pressure to explain why one of Europe’s richest countries was apparently unprepared for catastrophic floods that have so far claimed the lives of close to 200 and left hundreds more missing.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Tuesday will make her second visit to one flood-hit area — the historic spa town of Bad Münstereifel, about 20 miles southwest of Bonn.

The normally popular tourist spot with traditional black-and-white buildings and cobbled streets lies obliterated after several months’ worth of rain landed in the space of 24 hours Thursday into Friday.

The death toll from the flooding in Germany stands at 197, with at least 300 missing and 749 injured, according to the police and affected regional governments.

People look at the debris in the pedestrian zone in Bad Muenstereifel, western Germany, on Friday, after heavy rain hit parts of the country, causing widespread flooding.Ina Fassbender / AFP – Getty Images

But the number of dead is expected to rise as rescue and clear-up operations continue across the west of Germany, as well as parts of neighboring Belgium, where at least 31 people have died and dozens are missing.

Belgium held a day of national mourning Tuesday in honor of the dead, some of whom were killed when a dozen houses alongside a river collapsed in the town of Pepinster in the east of the country. Thousands in The Netherlands were forced to evacuate last week after water breached flood defenses in the south of the country.

Merkel visited the town of Schuld on Sunday, where she warned that the floods were connected to climate change.

“The German language hardly knows any words for the devastation that has been caused here,” she said during a speech there.

The death toll has led to questions over why so many people seemed to have been surprised by flash flooding, with opposition politicians suggesting the death toll revealed serious failings in Germany’s flood preparedness.

Federal Interior Minister Horst Seehofer, responding to the criticism during a visit to Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweile, defended the system, in which the German National Meteorological Service issues warnings to each of Germany’s 16 states and from there to districts and communities, which then decide at a local level how to respond.

“It would be completely inconceivable for such a catastrophe to be managed centrally from any one place,” Seehofer told journalists on Monday. “You need local knowledge.”

People collect debris in the pedestrian area of Bad Muenstereifel, western Germany, on Friday, after heavy rain hit parts of the country, causing widespread flooding.Ina Fassbender / AFP – Getty Images

Seehofer, however, called for all layers of Germany’s government — local, state and federal — to work together in future and admitted things could be improved.

“I’m not ruling out the fact that we have to improve one thing or the other,” he said, according to the German DPA news agency.

The DWD weather service warned on Monday July 12 that heavy rain was heading to western Germany and that flooding was very likely. On Wednesday morning, it said the risk of flooding was increasing and called on the population to seek guidance from local authorities.

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Economy Minister Peter Altmaier told the Bild newspaper Monday: “We will have to look at whether there were things that didn’t go well, whether there were things that went wrong, and then they have to be corrected.”

Meanwhile, a regional government has pointed to another problem: Covid-19.

“At the moment, a lot of people are coming together in a very small space to overcome the crisis together. We now have to be careful that dealing with the disaster does not turn into a super spread event,” David Freichel, a spokesperson from the Rhineland-Palatinate state leadership office told the RND newspaper network.

Carlo Angerer reported from Bonn, Patrick Smith reported from London.

Carlo Angerer and Reuters contributed.



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We’ve Found Deep Parts of The Sea Where The Last Ice Age Never Actually Ended

Some of the deepest parts of the Black Sea are still responding to climate changes prompted by the last ice age, scientists have discovered – a period which officially ended almost 12,000 years ago.

 

An analysis of gas hydrate deposits – in this case methane trapped by water molecules, in a solid substance that looks like ice – has revealed the lagging response in a northwestern area of the Black Sea known as the Danube fan.

Together with temperature measurements and other data, the drill cores of the gas hydrate deposits reveal something rather surprising: Levels of free methane gas under the seafloor have not yet adapted to the warmer conditions that have already prevailed on the surface for thousands of years.

“This shows that the gas hydrate system in the Danube deep sea fan is still responding to climate changes initiated at the end of the last glacial maximum,” write the researchers in their paper.

Examining drill cores. (Christian Rohleder)

Central to the findings are scientists’ attempts to determine the base of the gas hydrate stability zone (GHSZ) – the lowest point at which gas hydrates naturally form due to temperature, pressure, and a few other factors. Above and below that zone, you’ll get ‘free’ methane gas not trapped in hydrates.

To find the base of this zone, researchers typically turn to a seismic reflection measure of the sediment known as the bottom-simulating reflector, or BSR for short. However, earlier work has found that in this part of the Black Sea, there’s a curious depth discrepancy between the BSR and the base of the gas hydrate stability zone. 

 

By drilling down to the seafloor and taking temperature measurements, researchers have now concluded that the gas hydrate stability zone has adapted to the warmer conditions over the past millennia – as indicated by a rise to a higher level – but the free methane gas and the associated BSR are still playing catch up.

“From our point of view, the gas-hydrate stability boundary has already approached the warmer conditions in the subsurface, but the free methane gas, which is always found at this lower edge, has not yet managed to rise with it,”  says geophysicist Michael Riedel, from the GEOMAR Helmholtz-Center for Ocean Research in Germany.

That lagging response could be why the BSR isn’t where it should be. Sediment permeability could also play a role, the team thinks, and their measurements show that methane has managed to rise in certain areas but not others.

“In summary, we have found a very dynamic situation in this region, which also appears to be related with the development of the Black Sea since the last ice age,” says Riedel.

Around 20,000 years ago, the water level was around 100 meters (328 feet) lower in the Black Sea, meaning less pressure on the sea bed. The water was significantly cooler too. As far as the free methane gas is concerned, those conditions haven’t yet changed.

As with any study of the effects of climate change, this research is going to help in future climate modeling. There’s currently a huge volume of gas hydrate deposits underneath the Arctic, for instance, and it’s important to know how they might react to increases in temperature in the years ahead.

The scientists emphasize that their findings should be interpreted cautiously, with many different factors in play and plenty more scope for study – but they also stress the importance of in-situ measurements and quality data for an analysis such as this.

“For our investigations we used our drilling device MARUM-MeBo200 and broke all previous depth records with a maximum depth reached of almost 145 meters [476 feet],” says geologist Gerhard Bohrmann, from the University of Bremen in Germany.

The research has been published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters.

 

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New MBTA Orange Line train derails in work zone at Wellington Station

New MBTA Orange Line train derails in work zone at Wellington Station

One of the MBTA’s new Orange Line trains derailed Tuesday morning in a work zone at Wellington Station in Medford.According to officials, the train was going at a slow rate of speed and was crossing over to the southbound track at 11:40 a.m. when it derailed.About 100 passengers were on board at the time. The MBTA said there were no injuries. While crews worked to return the train to the rails, inspect the tracks and check equipment, shuttle buses were called in to replace the train service between Oak Grove and Community College, officials said. That was later reduced to the stretch between Oak Grove and Sullivan Square.Several units from the Medford Fire Department also responded to the scene. Wellington was where the MBTA tested the newest Orange Line trains, some of which have entered service.

One of the MBTA’s new Orange Line trains derailed Tuesday morning in a work zone at Wellington Station in Medford.

According to officials, the train was going at a slow rate of speed and was crossing over to the southbound track at 11:40 a.m. when it derailed.

About 100 passengers were on board at the time. The MBTA said there were no injuries.

While crews worked to return the train to the rails, inspect the tracks and check equipment, shuttle buses were called in to replace the train service between Oak Grove and Community College, officials said. That was later reduced to the stretch between Oak Grove and Sullivan Square.

Several units from the Medford Fire Department also responded to the scene.

Wellington was where the MBTA tested the newest Orange Line trains, some of which have entered service.

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New Technique Used to Spot Possible Super-Earth in Alpha Centauri’s Habitable Zone

Astronomers using a new technique may have not only found a super-Earth at a neighbouring star, but they may also have directly imaged it. And it could be nice and cozy in the habitable zone around Alpha Centauri.

 

It’s much easier to see giant planets than Earth-size planets. No matter which detection method is being used, larger planets are simply a larger needle in the cosmic haystack. But overall, astronomers are very interested in planets that are similar to Earth. And finding them is much more difficult.

We thought we’d have to wait for the ultra-powerful telescopes currently being built before we could directly image exoplanets.

Facilities like the Giant Magellan Telescope and the European Extremely Large Telescope will bring enormous observing power to bear on the task of exoplanet imaging.

But a team of researchers have developed a new technique that might do the job. They say they’ve imaged a possible sub-Neptune/super-Earth-sized planet orbiting one of our nearest neighbours, Alpha Centauri A.

The team presented their observations in an article in Nature Communications titled “Imaging low-mass planets within the habitable zone of α Centauri.” The lead author is Kevin Wagner, an astronomer and Sagan Fellow at the University of Arizona.

While astronomers have found low-mass exoplanets before, they’ve never sensed their light. They’ve watched as the planets revealed themselves by tugging on their stars. And they’ve watched as the light from the stars that host these planets dips when the planet passes in front of the star.

 

But they’ve never directly imaged one. Until now, maybe.

This new detection method comes down to the infrared. One of the challenges in imaging Earth-sized exoplanets in infrared is to discern the light coming from an exoplanet when that light is washed out by all of the background infrared radiation from the star.

Astronomers can search for exoplanets in wavelengths where the background infrared is diminished, but in those same wavelengths, temperate Earth-like planets are faint.

One method is to look in the near-infrared (NIR) part of the spectrum. In NIR, the thermal glow of the planet is not so washed out by the star. But the starlight is still blinding, and millions of times brighter than the planet. So just looking in the NIR is not a total solution.

The solution may be the NEAR (New Earths in the AlphaCen Region) instrument used in this research. NEAR is mounted on the ESO (European Southern Observatory’s) Very Large Telescope (VLT) in Chile. It works with the VISIR instrument, also on the VLT. The group behind NEAR is the Breakthrough Watch, part of Yuri Milner’s Breakthrough Initiatives.

 

The NEAR instrument not only observes in the desirable part of the infrared spectrum, but it also employs a coronagraph.

The Breakthrough group thought that the NEAR instrument used on an 8-meter ground-based telescope would allow for better observations of the Alpha Centauri system and its planets.

So they built the instrument in collaboration with the ESO and installed it on the Very Large Telescope.

This new finding came as a result of 100 hours of cumulative observations with NEAR and the VLT.

“These results,” the authors write, “demonstrate the feasibility of imaging rocky habitable-zone exoplanets with current and upcoming telescopes.”

The 100-hour commissioning run was meant to demonstrate the power of the instrument.

The team says that based on about 80 percent of the best images from that run, the NEAR instrument is an order of magnitude better than other methods for observing “…warm sub-Neptune-sized planets throughout much of the habitable zone of α Centauri A.”

They also, possibly, found a planet. “We also discuss a possible exoplanet or exozodiacal disk detection around? Centauri A,” they write. “However, an instrumental artifact of unknown origin cannot be ruled out.”

 

This isn’t the first time astronomers have found exoplanets in the Alpha Centauri system.

There are a couple of confirmed planets in the system, and there are also other candidates.

But none of them have been directly imaged like this new potential planet, which has the placeholder name C1, and is the first potential detection around the M-dwarf in the system, Proxima Centauri.

Follow-up observations will have to confirm or cancel the discovery.

It’s exciting to think that a warm-Neptune class exoplanet could be orbiting a Sun-like star in our nearest neighbouring star system. One of the Breakthrough Initiatives goals is to send lightsail spacecraft to the Alpha Centauri system and give us a closer look.

But that prospect is out of reach for now. And in some ways, this discovery isn’t so much about the planet, but about the technology developed to detect it.

The large majority of discovered exoplanets are gigantic planets similar in mass to Jupiter, Saturn, and Neptune. They’re the easiest to find. But as humans from Earth, we’re predominantly interested in planets like our own.

Earth-like planets in a star’s habitable zone get us excited about prospects for life on another planet. But they can also tell us a lot about our own Solar System, and how solar systems in general form and evolve.

If C1 does turn out to be a planet, then the Breakthrough group has succeeded in a vital endeavour. They’re the first to detect an Earth-like planet by direct imaging.

Not only that, but they did it with an 8-meter, ground-based telescope and an instrument specifically designed and developed to detect these types of planets in the Alpha Centauri system.

The authors are confident that NEAR can perform well, even in comparison to much larger telescopes. The conclusion of the paper contains a description of the overall sensitivity of the instrument. Then they write that “This would in principle be sufficient to detect an Earth-analog planet around α Centauri A (~20 µJy) in just a few hours, which is consistent with expectations for the ELTs.”

The E-ELT will have a 39-meter primary mirror. One of its capabilities and design goals is to image exoplanets, especially smaller, Earth-size ones, directly.

Of course, the E-ELT will be an enormously powerful telescope that will undoubtedly fuel scientific discovery for a long time, not just in exoplanet imaging but in a variety of other ways.

And other gigantic ground-based telescopes will change the exoplanet imaging game, too.

What took hours for NEAR to see may take only minutes for the E-ELT, the Thirty Meter Telescope, or the Giant Magellan Telescope to see.

NEAR can’t compete with those telescopes and was never meant to.

But if these results are confirmed, then NEAR has succeeded where nobody else has, and for a fraction of the price of a new telescope.

Either way, what NEAR has accomplished likely represents the future of exoplanet research. Rather than broad-based surveys like Kepler and TESS, scientists will soon be able to focus on individual planets.

This article was originally published by Universe Today. Read the original article.

 

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Armies of China and India pull back from hand-to-hand border battle zone | India

China and India have been pulling back frontline troops along disputed portions of their mountain border where they have been in a standoff for months, officials in both countries said.

The troops started the disengagement on Wednesday at the southern and northern bank of Pangong Lake in the Ladakh region, according to the officials.

India and China would remove forward deployments in a “phased, coordinated and verified manner”, the Indian defence minister, Rajnath Singh, told parliament on Thursday.

China’s defence ministry said in a statement on Wednesday that both sides had started a “synchronised and organised” disengagement.

The tense standoff high in the Karakoram mountains began in early May when Indian officials said Chinese soldiers crossed the frontier at three different points in Ladakh, erecting tents and guard posts and ignoring verbal warnings to leave. That triggered shouting matches, stone-throwing and fistfights, much of it replayed on television news channels and social media.

Tensions exploded into hand-to-hand combat with clubs, stones and fists on 15 June that left 20 Indian soldiers dead. China is believed to also have had casualties but has not given any details.

Since then both the countries have stationed tens of thousands of their soldiers backed by artillery, tanks and fighter jets along the fiercely contested Line of Actual Control, or LAC, with troops settling in for the harsh winter.

The LAC separates Chinese-held and Indian-held territories from Ladakh in the west to India’s eastern state of Arunachal Pradesh, which China claims in its entirety. It is broken in parts where Nepal and Bhutan border China. It divides areas of physical control rather than territorial claims.

India claims the Chinese-controlled Aksai Chin plateau as part of the Ladakh region. According to India the control line is 3,488km (2,167 miles) long, while China says it is considerably shorter.

Relations between the two countries have often been strained, partly due to their disputed border. They fought a border war in 1962 that spilled into Ladakh and ended in an uneasy truce. Since then troops have guarded the undefined border and occasionally brawled. They have agreed not to attack each other with firearms.

But in September China and India accused each other of sending soldiers into the other’s territory and fired warning shots for the first time in 45 years, raising the spectre of full-scale military conflict.

India unilaterally declared Ladakh a federal territory and separated it from disputed Kashmir in August 2019, ending Indian-administered Kashmir’s semi-autonomous status. It also vowed to take back the Aksai Chin plateau. China was among the first countries to strongly condemn the move, raising it at international forums including the UN security council.

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Euro zone economic forecasts

A cyclist rides past the Eiffel Tower following a light overnight snowfall.

LUDOVIC MARIN | AFP | Getty Images

LONDON — The European Commission has turned more negative on its prospects for the euro zone’s economy, projecting a lower growth rate for the region in 2021 as governments grapple with new variants of coronavirus.

The Brussels-based institution expects the 19-member region to grow by 3.8% this year. In November, it had forecast a 4.2% GDP (gross domestic product) rate for 2021.

The latest forecasts come at a tricky time for the European Union as its Covid vaccine rollout faces issues around production, supply and red tape. At the same time, European governments are concerned about mutations of the virus that are deemed more contagious. The longer the health emergency drags, the longer EU countries have to extend social restrictions and lockdowns, which takes their toll on the economy.

“We remain in the painful grip of the pandemic, its social and economic consequences all too evident. Yet there is, at last, light at the end of the tunnel,” Paolo Gentiloni, commissioner for economic affairs said in a statement on Thursday in relation to vaccine rollouts.

Going forward, the European Commission expects 2022 GDP in the euro area to reach 3.8%, having projected a 3% GDP rate for next year in November.

Looking at individual countries, Germany is seen growing by 3.2% in 2021, having contracted 5% in 2020. France on the other hand is expected to see a GDP rate of 5.5% this year, after dropping more than 8% in 2020.

The European Commission’s forecasts assume that social restrictions will be slightly eased in the second quarter of 2021, but that there will nonetheless be some sectoral measures still in place in 2022.

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Vaccination rate increasing in Mass. as fewer towns in red zone

For the third week straight, Massachusetts health officials reported a decrease in the number of communities at the highest risk of coronavirus transmission. 

The Department of Public Health also released its weekly vaccine dashboard Thursday, which displayed a rise in both vaccinations and vaccine dose shipments to Massachusetts, though shots are being administered quicker than they’re arriving. 

Thursday’s town-by-town coronavirus risk data categorizes communities’ risk level on a scale from red, the highest, to gray, the lowest — this week officials reported 153 towns in the red zone, compared to 192 last Thursday, continuing along the same downward trend as the past few weeks. 

See this Thursday’s full town-by-town coronavirus data here

According to the state, 149,030 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have been administered and reported in the last seven days, while 681,472 have been distributed overall. 

In total, 29,250 doses of the Pfizer vaccine were shipped to the Bay State in the last week, as well as 83,300 doses of Moderna’s vaccine. 

Officials reported that in total, 896,300 doses have been shipped to Massachusetts, marking a 31% dip from the previous week. 

While the state is making about 120,000 new vaccine appointments available this week, Gov. Charlie Baker urged patience at a press conference Wednesday, noting that most residents who are eligible may have to wait several weeks to schedule theirs. 

Baker’s administration has sparked frustration over the dragging pace of its distribution compared to most other states.

See this Thursday’s full weekly report on vaccinations here


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Euro zone GDP contracts amid tight covid restrictions, vaccine rollout

A restaurant closed during lockdown on Mitropoleos street next to Monastiraki square in Athens, Greece, on Monday, Nov. 9, 2020.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

LONDON — The euro zone economy dropped by 0.7% in the final quarter of 2020 as governments stepped up social restrictions to contain a second wave of Covid-19 infections, Europe’s statistics office said on Tuesday.

A preliminary reading points to an annual GDP contraction of 6.8% for the euro area in 2020, Eurostat said.

The region had experienced a growth rate of 12.4% in the third quarter as low infection rates at the time had allowed governments to partially reopen their economies.

However, the health emergency deteriorated in the last three months of 2020, with Germany and France going as far as reintroducing national lockdowns. The tightening of the social restrictions weighed on the economic performance once again.

Data released last week showed that Germany grew 0.1% in the final quarter of 2020. Spain experienced a GDP growth rate of 0.4% in the same period while France contracted by 1.3%. The numbers came in above analysts’ expectations and suggested that some businesses had learnt how to cope as best as possible with lockdowns.

Nonetheless, the three-month period also coincided with news of the first coronavirus vaccine approvals, which renewed optimism that the pandemic could come to an end sooner than expected. However, the rollout has since then been slow and bumpy, with economists fearing it will delay the much-needed economic recovery.

“The fiasco of Europe’s vaccination plan and Brussels’ retreat from its standoff with the U.K. and AstraZeneca have raised doubts about a European recovery, confirmed the worst caricatures of bungling bureaucracy and revived fears that the European Union could break apart,” Anatole Kaletsky, founder of Gakeval Research said in a note on Tuesday morning.

In addition to the uneven distribution of Covid-19 jabs, the number of daily cases has also increased in the new year amid the spread of new variants of the virus. Governments have thus decided to extend or reintroduce lockdowns to contain the spread.

In this context, the International Monetary Fund has lowered its growth expectations for the euro area in 2021. The Fund last week cut its growth forecast for the region by 1 percentage point to 4.2% this year. Germany, France, Italy and Spain — the four largest economies in the euro zone — all saw their growth expectations slashed for 2021. 

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Mystery of Greenland’s expanding ‘dark zone’ finally solved

The mystery of a growing “dark zone” on Greenland‘s melting ice sheet has been solved.

Researchers have found that phosphorus-rich dust blown across the ice may be the key to the phenomenon.

Greenland’s ice sheet is the second largest in the world. It covers around 656,000 square miles (1.71 million square kilometers), an area three times the size of Texas, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC). However, the ice sheet is now in a state of permanent retreat and is losing 500 gigatons (500 billion tons) of ice every year, Live Science previously reported.

That’s why the dark zone is so worrisome. During the summer months, part of the western section of the ice sheet turns from brilliant white to inky gray as algae bloom across the surface. Since 2000, these blooms have gotten bigger, causing the dark zone to expand, according to a statement by the researchers

The darker color of the ice reduces its albedo — the amount of sunlight it reflects back to space — and causes the ice sheet to absorb more heat. However, until now, what triggers these algal blooms has remained a mystery.

Related: 10 signs that Earth’s climate is off the rails

“We see a lot of variability in the blooms that form on the ice-sheet surface,” said Jenine McCutcheon, a microbiologist at the University of Waterloo in Ontario and lead author of the new study describing the findings. “We wanted to better understand what causes their growth,” she told Live Science.

 Understanding the algal blooms

During the Arctic’s sunless winter months, the ice algae — primarily made up of Ancylonema nordenskioeldii and species in the Mesotaenium genus — remain in a dormant state deep within the ice. During spring, as the ice melts, these algae slowly migrate to the surface. When they reach the surface, the Arctic summer provides 24-hour sunlight for photosynthesis and growth. The algae are normally green, but when exposed to constant sunlight, they create dark-colored sunscreens to protect themselves from damaging ultraviolet rays. This is what darkens the ice and, ironically, causes it to absorb more sunlight.

(Image credit: Jim McQuaid)

But sunlight alone didn’t seem enough to cause the expansive blooms the researchers were seeing.

After the researchers analyzed samples they collected from the surface, “it became clear phosphorus was the most important nutrient to the algae,” study co-author Jim McQuaid, a climate scientist at the University of Leeds in England, told Live Science. “We then found that it was originating locally.”

In Greenland, the phosphorus comes from hydroxylapatite — a phosphate mineral that also contains calcium, oxygen and hydrogen — that gets blown across the ice as dust from exposed rocky outcrops. 

“As the atmosphere gets warmer due to climate change, the exposed rock becomes drier and winds get stronger,” McQuaid said. “This means more dust is transported across the ice.”

Melting ice in the area also uncovers more hydroxylapatite-rich rocks, thus increasing the available phosphorus. So the algal blooms are part of a positive feedback loop: The increased ice melting leads to a higher phosphorus input, which spurs the algal growth that, in turn, further increases the ice melting.

“This type of thing will continue to happen in the future; there’s no doubt in my mind,” McQuaid said, referring to the accelerated melting.

 However, now that scientists fully understand the dark zone phenomenon, they can more accurately predict how fast the Greenland ice sheet will melt.

“If we can measure the amount of phosphorus that’s in the environment, it may be possible to translate that to an estimate of algal growth and allow us to better monitor the rate of ice melting,” McCutcheon said.

The study was published online Jan. 25 in the journal Nature Communications.

Originally published on Live Science.

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