Increasing speed of Greenland glaciers gives new insight for rising sea level – UW Today

Ian Joughin/Science/AAAS--Massive sections of ice (center front) have broken away from the Jakobshavn glacier into the sea. There's enough water stored in Greenland's glaciers to raise the sea level by 20 feet.

Changes in the speed that ice travels in more than 200 outlet glaciers indicates that Greenland’s contribution to rising sea level in the 21st century might be significantly less than the upper limits some scientists thought possible, a new study shows.  Read more about it here, or listen to NPR’s “All Things Considered” story here!

Airborne pathogens – a threat for Puget Sound orcas? – Seattle Times

New research is shedding light on the potential threat of airborne pathogens to the killer whales that use Puget Sound waters.  Read more here.

New study highlights the commercial and ecological importance of forage fish – Washington Post

A report released earlier this week by the 13-member Lenfest Forage Fish Task Force – which includes UW scientists Tim Essington (School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences) and Dee Boersma (Biology) – details the importance of forage fish to commercially valuable fish species and other’s dependent upon them as a food source.  Check out the report’s executive summary, or read about it in the Washington Post. Also, check out this coverage in ScienceInsider!

Fossil raindrop impressions imply greenhouse gases loaded early atmosphere – UW Today

In ancient Earth history, the sun burned as much as 30 percent dimmer than it does now. Theoretically that should have encased the planet in ice, but there is geologic evidence for rivers and ocean sediments between 2 billion and 4 billion years ago.

Scientists have speculated that temperatures warm enough to maintain liquid water were the result of a much thicker atmosphere, high concentrations of greenhouse gases or a combination of the two.

Now University of Washington researchers, using evidence from fossilized raindrop impressions from 2.7 billion years ago to deduce atmospheric pressure at the time, have demonstrated that an abundance of greenhouse gases most likely caused the warm temperatures.

Their work, which has implications for the search for life on other planets, is published March 28 in Nature.  Read more here.

UW Professor Norbert Untersteiner remembered – Seattle Times

Professor Norbert Untersteiner – Department of Atmospheric Sciences in UW’s College of the Environment – passed away earlier this month; he was 86.  Read about his remarkable life and legacy – from his childhood in Austria to his adventures and work in the Arctic – in this Seattle Times piece.

Scientists discover on Mars a new class of landform not seen before – UW Today

Geologists in the Department of Earth and Space Sciences at the College of the Environment have discovered a new type of landform to which there are not many analogs here on Earth.  To learn more, click here.

Sea life may offer pH clues – Spokesman-Review

The Spokesman-Review profiles the work UW’s Friday Harbor Laboratories is doing to understand ocean acidification.  Read more here.