New emotification of global warming: selling the sizzle of melting glaciers

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“The sound of ice melting” Image by Paul Kos
From the American Institute of Physics, some research they lament doesn’t carry “the same emotional wallop as images” related to “climate trends”. Oh, darn.

Maybe they need to link up with artist Paul Kos whose performance art is seen at right. His emotive imagery and recordings of ice melting dates all the way back to 1970. Yes, regular man-made ice makes sounds while it melts too. According to the press release, this “research” was also done in a studio, rather than in situ. It’s all about the tiny bubbles escaping it seems, something I’ll bet Don Ho would appreciate.

Hmm, maybe they should team up with these guys and release an album: “City College of New York music professor Jonathan Perl teamed up with City University of New York climate professor Marco Tedesco to create musical soundscapes or “sonifications” that document the changes in the glacial ice in Greenland over the last 54 years.

Or maybe these guys: “Glaciers are dying, but they are not doing so quietly. The Glacier Music project of the Goethe Institutes in Tashkent and Almaty uses the sounds and powerful emotional image of melting glaciers as source of inspiration for festivals, open calls, concerts, sculpture, video and sound installations.“.

Emotifying ice melt has been a popular pastime with warmists, who have traditionally focused on the supposed plight of polar bears. However, the sound of melting ice is hardly anything new, explorers and the indigenous people of the Arctic have heard it for centuries. With 50 words for snow, I’m betting they even have a word for noisy melting ice since they’d hear it every spring.

Glaciers sizzle as they disappear into warmer water

The sounds of bubbles escaping from melting ice make underwater glacial fjords one of the loudest natural marine environments on earth

SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 27, 2013 – Scientists have recorded and identified one of the most prominent sounds of a warming planet: the sizzle of glacier ice as it melts into the sea. The noise, caused by trapped air bubbles squirting out of the disappearing ice, could provide clues to the rate of glacier melt and help researchers better monitor the fast-changing polar environments. 

Geophysicist Erin Pettit, a researcher at the University of Alaska, had often heard popping, crackling sounds while out kayaking in the frigid northern waters. The sounds were also picked up by underwater microphones Pettit set up off the Alaskan coast, and at a much louder volume than above the surface.

“If you were underneath the water in a complete downpour, with the rain pounding the water, that’s one of the loudest natural ocean sounds out there,” she said. “In glacial fjords we record that level of sound almost continually.”

While Pettit suspected the din was caused by melting ice, she couldn’t confirm that hypothesis without a more controlled experiment. So she enlisted the help of Kevin Lee and Preston Wilson, acoustics experts from the University of Texas. Pettit sent the Texas researchers chunks of glacier, which they mounted in a tank of chilled water. Lee and Wilson recorded video and audio of the ice as it melted and were able to match sounds on the recording to the escape of bubbles from the ice.

“Most of the sound comes from the bubbles oscillating when they’re ejected,” Lee said. “A bubble when it is released from a nozzle or any orifice will naturally oscillate at a frequency that’s inversely proportional to the radius of the bubble,” he said, meaning the smaller the bubble, the higher the pitch. The researchers recorded sounds in the 1 – 3 kilohertz range, which is right in the middle of the frequencies humans hear.

Scientists have known for decades that the bubbles in glaciers form when snow crystals trap pockets of air and then get slowly squashed down under the weight of more snow. As the snow is compacted it turns into ice and the air bubbles become pressurized. The regular way the bubbles form means that they are evenly distributed throughout the ice, an important characteristic if you want to use the sound intensity of bubble squirts to measure ice melt rate.

While the symphony of melting ice might not carry the same emotional wallop as images, sound still has its own, sometimes very loud, story to tell. Pettit and Lee say they could imagine using hydrophone recordings in glacial fjords to monitor relative changes in glacier melting in response to one-time weather events, seasonal changes, and long-term climate trends. Because sound travels long distances underwater, recording microphones can be placed a safe distance from unstable ice sheets. The audio recordings would complement other measurements of ice melt, such as time-lapse photography and salinity readings.

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Presentation 4aUW4, “Underwater sound radiated by bubbles released by melting glacier ice,” will take place on Thursday, Dec. 5, 2013, at 9:55 a.m. The abstract describing this work can be found here: http://asa2013.abstractcentral.com/planner.jsp.

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December 1, 2013 9:21 pm

Luke Warmist says:
December 1, 2013 at 4:12 pm
I’m going to try a degree symbol which is & d e g ; without spaces : ° Lets see if it works.

Alvin
December 1, 2013 10:38 pm

So, ice farts?

Bill Hunter
December 1, 2013 10:57 pm

Woe is us! An anthropogenic assault on whale hearing! The whales are going to starve from not being able to hear the faint clicking sound made by krill due to noises induced by accelerated ice melt!

John F. Hultquist
December 1, 2013 11:31 pm

Tom J says:
December 1, 2013 at 8:09 pm
“There actually is such a thing as an ice worm and they do live on glaciers and feed on glacial algae.”

. . . and the algae I saw was pink. Don’t recall the color of the worms. 45 years ago.
~ ~ ~ ~
Luke Warmist says:
December 1, 2013 at 4:12 pm
“(sorry — can’t do ‘degrees’ symbol)

Find the white on blue rectangle above the ad for WeatherBell on the right side on all WUWT posts; now it is beside a comment by Cobb at 12:52
Once on Ric Werme’s page, scroll down to
Special characters in comments
Note his suggestion to use HTML codes, the one you want is & # 8304 without the spaces.

December 1, 2013 11:35 pm

Hold down the [Alt] key and type “0176” like this: °

Greg S
December 2, 2013 12:29 am

So as I sit here in sub-tropical Queensland, Australia I can happily attest to the truth in this, my experiment includes a freezer, a glass and a bottle of one of Scotland’s finest single malt whiskeys. If I sit here quietly I can hear the sounds of the trapped air bubbles escaping as the ice melts.
Now how do I get a government grant to pay for this research?

David Jones
December 2, 2013 1:10 am

Steve Case says:
December 1, 2013 at 11:35 pm
Hold down the [Alt] key and type “0176″ like this: °
Better still Press NUM LOCK to turn on num lock. then, on the numeric keyboard hold down the ALT key………..etc.

FerdinandAkin
December 2, 2013 2:58 am

BAIKAL ICE live sound

Ed Zuiderwijk
December 2, 2013 7:03 am

Perhaps these clowns should be introduced to the sound of one clapping hand?

Jimbo
December 2, 2013 7:12 am

OK Mod, this bit should not be in quotes.
It’s all our fault and we must act now. PRESS RECORD.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/12/01/new-emotification-of-global-warming-selling-the-sizzle-of-melting-glaciers/#comment-1489077

Gord Richmond
December 2, 2013 12:43 pm

I was in a camp on Chuchi Lake in northern B.C. one winter many years ago, and the Spring breakup was approaching. The lake ice had degraded to the point that it was no longer safe to cross it on a snowmobile. One night, I was awakened by a loud musical tinkling sound, like thousands of tiny bells. Went down to the shoreline, and the ice was on the move. The ice had become recrystallized into “candle ice”, vertically-oriented crystal blades maybe 4 to 6 inches in length, as the wind shifted the ice pack alongshore, these crystals were snapping off the ice beneath them, giving rise to the tinkle, which was quite beautiful to hear and behold. Next morning, we had open water before us.

December 2, 2013 12:47 pm

“The noise, caused by trapped air bubbles squirting out of the disappearing ice, could provide clues to the rate of glacier melt and help researchers better monitor the fast-changing polar environments.”
EEEEEAAAAAAAAAGGGGGGGGGGGGGHHHHH!!!!!!!! The money-shot formula-sentence.

RoHa
December 2, 2013 9:02 pm

S.
Please, please, don’t tell me you put ice into malt whisky. The only thing that should be added to whisky is more whisky.