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  • Scientists with NASA, CIRES and other institutions may have just solved an

  • interesting climate mystery,

  • an historic mystery. This is a story about how people affect the

  • environment in many ways,

  • sometimes unexpectedly. This is what we strive to understand at CIRES.

  • So here's the mystery: Glaciers in the Alps began to retreat abruptly in the

  • 1860s,

  • but it was cold in the region, still cold after a few centuries of a

  • Little Ice Age in Europe. Now the Industrial Revolution had

  • just begun in the 1860s, with factories burning coal and other

  • fuels in earnest.

  • It was too soon for that activity to have caused enough greenhouse warming to melt

  • the glaciers.

  • So the scientists figured there must be something else going on, something that

  • could melt the snow.

  • Soot or black carbon from those factors popping up in Western Europe might do it, the team figured.

  • The researchers began to dig into what was known about how much black carbon was in the

  • air back in the 1860s

  • Soot, when it lands on snow, can absorb sunlight and cause melt.

  • With models and observations of soot in snow and ice layers, they showed that

  • when you account for the effect of soot on snow,

  • the glacial retreat in the 1860s was no longer surprising.

  • It was an expected consequence of human activity.

Scientists with NASA, CIRES and other institutions may have just solved an

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