MiG wreckage still stuck in Himachal glacier

Shimla, Oct 30 (IANS) Rescuers have still not been able to retrieve the main wreckage of an Indian Air Force (IAF) MiG-29 combat jet stuck in a glacier in the Himalayan heights of Himachal Pradesh’s Lahaul Valley, officials sa

id Sunday.

There is also no word yet on Squadron Leader D.S. Tomar who piloted the ill-fated plane.

“The major portion of the wreckage is still stuck in nearly 10 feet of snow of the glacier. The search parties are trying it hard to dig the wreckage but they haven’t been successful,” Deputy Superintendent of Police Khajana Ram told IANS over phone.

“As the portion of the glacier which contains the debris is caving in, it’s proving even more difficult to reach it,” he said.

The search teams Friday identified more parts of the combat jet on the Gangstang glacier in the Chokhang hills. It’s one of the prominent glaciers in the area.

Another official said as the glacier is not solid enough due to high temperature in the past few months, the chances of debris sinking further into the glacier can’t be ruled out. “So rescue workers are taking more precautions.”

The fighter jet crashed Oct 18 in the Himalayan terrain at elevations ranging from 15,000 to 20,000 feet above sea level. It was on a night flying training mission and had taken off from Adampur near Jalandhar in Punjab.

“Over 55 personnel, including expert mountaineers from the IAF, the Indian Army and some local mountaineers are involved in day-and-night combing operations,” an IAF official involved in the search told IANS, requesting anonymity.

“They are fighting against all odds ranging from hostile weather to steep gradients,” he added.

The task force commander, Group Capt P.K. Sharma, had said earlier that the crash site was identified by aerial search and imageries received from the remotely piloted aircraft and other aircraft which conducted the photo reconnaissance of the area.

Gallas rolls over in dune buggy race

France defender William Gallas rolled over while taking part in a dune buggy race at the team’s World Cup training camp in the French Alps on Sunday.

Gallas got out of the buggy and waved to his team mates to indicate he had not been hurt in the crash, a Reuters photographer at the scene reported.

The defender escaped with just a graze on his left hand, a team spokesman said.

The former Arsenal skipper is recovering from a calf injury and has been back in training for several days, suggesting he will be fit to take part in the June 11-July 11 finals in South Africa.

France, in a week-long training camp at this scenic ski village, have been taking part in activities such as hiking up a glacier and an introduction to biathlon, a mixture of cross-country skiing and shooting.

(Reporting by Charles Platiau; Writing by Patrick Vignal; Editing by Ed Osmond; To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Song explaining how to pronounce Eyjafjallajvkull a YouTube hit

London, May 13 (ANI): A song explaining the pronunciation of the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajvkull is fast becoming a rage on YouTube.

The volcano made headlines after it erupted last month leaving passengers stranded across European airports.

And now Icelandic singer Eliza Newman is helping people to pronounce its name.

Her video has racked up more than 200,000 hits on YouTube.

Playing the ukulele, Newman croons:

Eyjafjallajokull is a long, long name

For such a small glacier, with such notorious fame

And Eyjafjallajokull has caused quite a stir

And no-one can fly anywhere except the birds

Please stop it Eyjafjallajokull

“The volcano has caused a lot of problems around the world, not least with people who haven””t been able to say it,” the Sun quoted Newman, as saying.

She added: “Anything I can do to help people get their tongue round the word is fantastic. Little songs and rhymes always help.” (ANI)

SAARC should adopt cooperative approach to tackle issues: Bashir

Bhutan, Apr 26(ANI): Pakistan Foreign Secretary Salman Bashir has said that south Asian countries should adopt a regional cooperative approach to effectively tackle its water issues.

Addressing the 37th session of the Standing Committee of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) here, Bashir said South Asia was a water-stressed region and should use the approach to address the issues of glacier melting, watershed management and pollution on an urgent basis.

He emphasized that SAARC should give priority to poverty alleviation, and through effective implementation of the SAARC Social Charter, they should achieve their goals in various countries, The Daily Times reports.

Dwelling on the energy issues, Bashir said that Pakistan supported the proposal to strengthen the SAARC Energy Centre, implementation of proposed projects aimed at providing energy efficiency and support on renewable energy. (ANI)

Iceland now to close airports due to ash

Iceland, able to keep its airports open while European airlines were grounded due to ash from its volcanic eruption, is now closing its airspace because of a change in wind direction, authorities said on Thursday.

The eruption of the volcano under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, about 120 km (75 miles) southeast of the capital Reykjavik, caused six days of travel chaos for Europe as it spewed ash miles into the air.

European airlines have now started flying again, but Iceland is just about to close after the wind changed direction and started blowing ash east towards the capital and its airport.

“With a view to the ash distribution forecast for Friday April 23 it can be expected that the flight zone for Keflavik and Reykjavik Airports will be closed for a certain period of time,” the aviation authority said in a statement.

“This is for the first time that the flight zone around the two Icelandic international airports has closed since the beginning of the eruption …,” it said, referring to a first eruption in March which presaged the current, larger eruption.

Iceland, despite being home to the volcano which caused so much trouble for European travellers, had not been affected by the ash from the volcano as the wind had been taking it away from the island, south to the rest of Europe.

The website of Keflavik airport, the main international airport serving Reykjavik, showed a series of flights being cancelled for Friday, as well as several flights being brought up to 0500 GMT, before the expected flight ban from 0600 GMT.

(Reporting by Patrick Lannin)

Qantas extends flight delays

Qantas flights to Europe will remain cancelled until at least Friday following further volcanic activity in Iceland.

The airline says over 15,000 customers have been affected by the delays.

British authorities say the eruption of Iceland’s Eyjafjallajokull glacier volcano is intensifying and a new ash cloud is drifting south-east across the Atlantic towards the UK and northern Europe.

The news has cast doubt on moves to reopen airspace over Europe, where flight restrictions had been expected to be relaxed later today.

Airports in northern England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Belgium, France and Germany had been slowly grinding back into action and had been expected to allow planes back into the air from this afternoon.

But Qantas says it has been told the new ash cloud could prevent some European airports from re-opening as planned.

Qantas spokesman David Epstein says there is confusion over a partial no-fly zone and how it will affect travel.

Mr Epstein says there are no plans to resume flights from Australia to the UK.

“The priority is to get aircraft out of Heathrow rather than necessarily in,” he said.

He says the airline is waiting to see if it can release some of its stranded planes from Heathrow Airport in London.

“We’ve got two aircraft on the ground there. We can have them up and running within the space of about three-and-a-half hours,” Mr Epstein said.

“We’ve been in touch with Heathrow to get slots for them if the airport opens and we’re also in touch with other UK authorities, but at this stage it’s still wait and see.”

Qantas says it can no longer absorb the costs associated with stranded passengers and is now losing $1.5 million a day.

Volcano erupts under Iceland glacier, hundreds flee

REYKJAVIK, April 14 (Reuters) – A volcanic eruption in southern Iceland spewed black smoke and white steam into the air on Wednesday and partially melted a glacier, forcing hundreds to evacuate from the thinly populated area.

The plume was seen rising from a crater under about 200 metres (656 ft) of ice at the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, close to the site of another eruption which started last month and only died down on Monday, Icelandic state radio reported.

The Icelandic Civil Defence Authority ordered 700 people to evacuate their homes and warned that melting ice could set off floods at a nearby river, which had already risen by 84 centimetres (33 inches), the radio said.

A coast guard plane flying overhead was able to spot an opening in the glacier, but no lava or fire was immediately visible due to low clouds, the report said.

Icelandic scientists had measured increased seismic activity near the glacier about two hours before the volcano started to erupt in the early morning on Wednesday, it added.

In March, another volcano erupted near the Eyjafjallajokull glacier and caused no casualties.

The volcano, situated beneath Iceland’s fifth largest glacier, has erupted five times since Iceland was settled in the ninth century.

Iceland sits on a volcanic hotspot in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and has relatively frequent eruptions, although most occur in sparsely populated areas and pose little danger to people or property. Before March, the last eruption took place in 2004.

Iceland’s erupting volcano forms new craters

Thu, Apr 1 09:01 AM

A volcano blasting steam and ash into the atmosphere in the south of Iceland formed new craters spewing lava on Wednesday, Icelandic radio said.

The volcano under the Eyjafjallajokull glacier began erupting 10 days ago, forcing hundreds of people to leave the area and leading authorities to divert flights.

A new fissure about 300 metres long opened up on Wednesday, state radio said. Geologists believe this could mean activity is moving further north, towards the nature reserve of Thorsmork, a popular tourist site.

Vidir Gardarsson of the Civil Defence in Reykjavik told the newspaper Morgonbladid the fissure was still expanding.

“We want to move people away from the area while we figure out what is going on,” he said. “This is a security measure while this evolves.”

Police estimate that about 25,000 people have visited the site in recent days.

Iceland lies on a volcanic hotspot in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and is prone to eruptions, although most occur in sparsely populated areas and pose little danger to life or property. The last eruption took place in 2004.

Scientists had been monitoring the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, dormant since 1821, for signs of seismic activity but said there was little warning before the latest activity.

(Editing by Andrew Dobbie)

“Goddess” glacier melting in Kashmir

Washington, March 25 (ANI): Latest data from a 2009 New Delhi-based Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) expedition shows that in the past four decades, the Kolahoi glacier in Kashmir, which is popularly known as “goddess of light”, has lost between 15 to 18 percent of its total volume.

The Kolahoi glacier in the western Himalaya is known as Gwash Brani—“goddess of light”—to the millions of people in India and Pakistan who depend on its yearly run-off for survival.

Surrounded by the snow-capped peaks of the world’s tallest mountain range, the Kashmir region, disputed over by India and Pakistan, is home to thousands of glaciers.

According to a report in National Geographic News, the latest data from a 2009 TERI expedition shows that in the past four decades, Kolahoi has lost between 15 to 18 percent of its total volume.

The research also shows that the glacier is retreating by almost ten feet (three meters) a year.

Last year, TERI established the first program to measure Kashmir’s glaciers, selecting Kolahoi, in the Liddar Valley, as a focus area.

A local called Ganai was hired by TERI to help with the expeditions to Kolahoi, making him the first in his village to study climate change.

Though Ganai does not have enough scientific experience to trek to the accumulation zone, he and six other members of the team play a vital role collecting data on the lower portions of the glacier know as the ablation zone, or the area where the ice melts.

Ganai and colleagues first drill a series of holes into the ice of the ablation zone and then take pre-measured sticks and place them in the holes.

After each melting season, the team will measure the length of the pole exposed, take notes, and repeat the procedure.

This tells them how much the volume of the glacier has changed between melting seasons.

According to TERI glaciologist Shresth Tayal, the research done on Kolahoi will have a global impact.

“We do not have much reliable data on western Himalayan glaciers,” he said.

“If you want to know what the global impact of climate change is going to be and make accurate projections, you can not exclude the Himalaya from the Rockies and the Alps,” he added.

To measure the flow of meltwater through the Liddar Valley, TERI established a monitoring station in the West Liddar River, the main tributary of the Jhelum River, which is one of the largest rivers in Kashmir.

“Each day the station is collecting data on a looming disaster,” Tayal said. (ANI)

Active Icelandic volcano may cause bigger eruption

A volcano spouting lava in the south of Iceland showed signs of increased activity on Monday, leading scientists to warn it could trigger a far more powerful eruption at a nearby geological hotspot.

The eruption near the Eyjafjallajokull glacier, which began shortly before midnight on Saturday, sent steam 4 kilometres up in the air and is gradually intensifying, geophysicist Steinunn Jakobsdottir told a local newspaper.

Another scientist said he was concerned the activity could cause an eruption at Mount Katla, an “enormously powerful” volcano lying under a glacier nearby.

“Eyjafjallajokull hardly makes a move without Mount Katla wanting to get in on the action,” said Pall Einarsson, a geophysicist at the University of Iceland. “It is therefore of utmost importance to watch events carefully.”

An eruption at Mount Katla could melt huge amounts of ice and cause massive floods, potentially affecting a town of 300 people nearby, Einarsson added. Three previous eruptions at Eyjafjallajokull have triggered eruptions at Mount Katla.

On Sunday, rescue teams evacuated 500 people from the rural area around the volcano and police declared a local state of emergency. International flights were diverted because of the risk of interference from ash clouds.

No injuries or damage to property were reported.

Iceland sits on a volcanic hotspot in the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and has relatively frequent eruptions, though most occur in sparsely populated areas and pose little danger to people or property. The last eruption i Iceland took place in 2004.

(Reporting by Omar Valdimarsson, editing by Tim Pearce)

Antarctica’s secret water network far more dynamic than believed

London, September 15 (ANI): The first complete map of the lakes beneath Antarctica’s ice sheets reveals the continent’s secret water network is far more dynamic than we thought, and could be acting as a powerful lubricant beneath glaciers, contributing to sea level rise.

According to a report in New Scientist, Ian Joughin at the University of Washington in Seattle and colleagues developed the map.

Unlike previous lake maps, which are confined to small regions, Joughin and colleagues mapped 124 subglacial lakes across Antarctica using lasers on NASA’s ICESat satellite.

The team also observed the lakes draining and filling.

While interior lakes tended to be static, many coastal lakes changed significantly. Some even appear to be connected by channels under the ice hundreds of kilometres long.

For instance, when upstream lakes under the Recovery glacier drained 3 cubic kilometres of water, lakes downstream gained a similar amount.

Water flowing under glaciers can act as a lubricant, causing land ice to accelerate into the sea and add to rising sea levels.

“The implications for the flow of ice are potentially quite significant,” said Andy Smith of the British Antarctic Survey in Cambridge, UK.

“Those lakes with no clear drainage channels are of particular interest because they could be spreading a thin film of lubricating water under glaciers,” he added. (ANI)

Gen Kapoor flags in all-women Army team that scaled Siachen’s highest peak

New Delhi, Sep 9 (ANI): Army Chief General Deepak Kapoor flagged in the first ever women expedition team for army corps of engineers to Indira Col, Siachen, today at Army Headquarters here.

The Indian Army has achieved another milestone in the history of Indian mountaineering by undertaking an ‘All Women Officers Expedition’ to Siachen glacier.

The Corps of Engineers in consonance with its spirit of adventure has organised this unique expedition to the highest and coldest battlefield in the world, Siachen Glacier, a junction point of three countries – India, China and Pakistan.

The expedition led by Major Megha Astagikar summitted Indira Col, located at an altitude of 20,187 feet, after trekking 103.10 kilometers on August 15, which coincided with the 62nd Independence Day.

Enroute to Indira Col, the team halted at eight camps to carry out acclimatisation, training and build-up of essential logistics. Braving inclement weather and extremely difficult terrain conditions, Indira Col was summitted well before the planned schedule.

The team traversed across the most treacherous high altitude terrain characterised by high avalanche-prone snow bound area with deep crevasses, steep ice-walls and scarce oxygen.

The 17 women officers expedition team was flagged-off by the Vice Chief of Army Staff, Lt General Noble Thamburaj on August 3.

Prior to undertaking the expedition, a detailed planning and rigorous training in basic ice-craft and mountaineering skills was carried out by the team at the Army Mountaineering Institute, Siachen Base Camp.

Major AR Ramakrishnan, the trainer of the expedition team, inspite of being a battle casualty during ‘Operation Vijay’ summitted Indira Col alongwith the team making the achievement of the expedition spectacular and creditable. (ANI)

American glaciers shrinking dramatically in response to global warming

Washington, September 6 (ANI): Reports indicate that most glaciers in Washington and Alaska in the US are dramatically shrinking in response to a warming climate.

During the past 50 years, USGS (US Geological Survey) scientists have measured changes in the mass (length and thickness) of three glaciers: Alaska’s Gulkana and Wolverine Glaciers and Washington’s South Cascade Glacier.

These are the longest such records in North America and among the longest in the world.

These three glaciers are known as benchmark glaciers because they are widely spaced, represent different climate regimes, and can be used to understand the thousands of other glaciers in nearby regions.

In addition to these three glaciers, more than 99 percent of America’s thousands of large glaciers have long documented records that show an overall shrinkage as climate warms. (ANI)

Antarctica’s plumbing system more dynamic than previously believed

Washington, Sept 2 (ANI): Scientists, using space-based lasers on a NASA satellite have created the most comprehensive inventory of lakes that actively drain or fill under Antarctica’s ice, which has revealed a continental plumbing system that is more dynamic than previously thought.

“Even though Antarctica’s ice sheet looks static, the more we watch it, the more we see there is activity going on there all the time,” said Benjamin Smith of the University of Washington in Seattle, who led the study.

Unlike most lakes, Antarctic lakes are under pressure from the ice above. That pressure can push melt water from place to place like water in a squeezed balloon.

The water moves under the ice in a broad, thin layer, but also through a linked cavity system. This flow can resupply other lakes near and far.

Understanding this plumbing is important, as it can lubricate glacier flow and send the ice speeding toward the ocean, where it can melt and contribute to sea level change.

But figuring out what’s happening beneath miles of ice is a challenge.

Researchers led by Smith analyzed 4.5 years of ice elevation data from NASA’s Ice, Cloud and land Elevation satellite (ICESat) to create the most complete inventory to date of changes in the Antarctic plumbing system.

The team has mapped the location of 124 active lakes, estimated how fast they drain or fill, and described the implications for lake and ice-sheet dynamics.

Smith, Helen Fricker, a geophysicist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and colleagues extended their elevation analysis to cover most of the Antarctic continent and 4.5 years of data from ICESat’s Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS).

By observing how ice sheet elevation changed between the two or three times the satellite flew over a section every year, researchers could determine which lakes were active.

They also used the elevation changes and the properties of water and ice to estimate the volume change.

Only a few of the more than 200 previously identified lakes were confirmed active, implying that lakes in East Antarctica’s high-density “Lakes District” are mostly inactive and do not contribute much to ice sheet changes.

Most of the 124 newly observed active lakes turned up in coastal areas, at the head of large drainage systems, which have the largest potential to contribute to sea level change.

According to Robert Bindschadler, a glaciologist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, “The survey shows that most active subglacial lakes are located where the ice is moving fast, which implies a relationship.” (ANI)

Blackberry saves Brit skier from 700ft death plunge

London, June 29 (ANI): A 52-year-old skier miraculously survived the harrowing 700 ft fall, courtesy his Blackberry phone.

David Fitzherbert was skiing off-piste down a glacier in the Matterhorn and Monterosa peaks in Switzerland when the snow gave way.

However, he got caught between the two rocks due to the 1/2inch-wide Blackberry in his breast pocket.

“The snow gave way beneath me and I fell down a very deep crevasse,” the Sun quoted Fitzherbert as saying.

“After 70 feet it narrowed and I became stuck like a cork in a bottle between the walls.

“Fortunately the extra inches of the Blackberry were enough to block the fall,” he added.

Fitzherbert broke his jaw, smashed his teeth, cracked a bone in his chest, and nearly tore his nose off.

His mountain guide made a distress call, and a mountain rescue team came to dig him out.

“I was stuck so fast they had to get a drill to dig away at the ice around me. I was eventually winched out by the helicopter rescue team,” David added. (ANI)

Mysterious South American glaciers grow as others shrink

Washington, June 23 (ANI): In times when most glaciers in the world are shrinking due to global warming, two mysterious South American glaciers are displaying strange behavior in the sense that they are growing.

“Most of the 50 massive glaciers draped over the spine of the Patagonian Andes are shrinking in response to a global warming,” said Andres Rivera, a glaciologist at the Center for Scientific Studies in Valdivia, Chile.

But, according to a report in National Geographic News, the Perito Moreno glacier in Argentina and Pio XI glacier in Chile are taking on ice, instead of shedding it.

“What is happening is not well understood,” Rivera said.

Theories center on the geography and topography of the glaciers; the depth and temperature of the waters where the glaciers end; and how quickly, or slowly, they react to changes in the climate.

Yet overall, “if you account for the gains and losses of all of Patagonia’s glaciers, they are (still) losing huge amounts of ice,” Rivera pointed out.

“One hypothesis for the 3-mile-wide (5 kilometer-wide) Perito Moreno’s advance is the glacier’s apparent insensitivity to changes in what glaciologists call the equilibrium line on glaciers,” Rivera said.

As a result, the amount of ice lost or gained is minimal.

It could also be that Perito Moreno simply hasn’t got all that much to lose.

Lago Argentino, the lake where Perito Moreno ends, is shallower than the bodies of water at the ends of most glaciers.

Most glaciers calve, or release ice, in deep water, but not Perito Moreno, where the calving rates are higher than on other Patagonian glaciers.

That means less of the glacier is in the melting zone below the equilibrium line.

As heavy snowfall above the equilibrium line pushes the glacier downhill, the glacier breaks up when it hits the lake, Rivera explained.

“Such impacts kept the glacier from growing longer when the climate was cooler, and thus more likely to expand,” he said.

As for the Pio XI glacier in Chile, some scientists have attempted to explain its advance as a glacial surge, a periodic and sudden expansion of a glacier that is little understood but is thought to be unrelated to external forces. (ANI)

Gulmarg’s special museum exhibits gears used in high altitude warfare

Gulmarg, May 24 (ANI): A museum has been set up inside the High Altitude Warfare School (HAWS) in Gulmarg to display old and modern warfare equipment and gears used by the Indian Army during high altitude warfare or by mountaineers during expeditions.

The Kanchenjunga Museum in Gulmarg has war-related climbing and mountaineering equipment used by Indian army from 1947 till date.

Initially started as a 19 Infantry Division Ski School in 1948, the High-Altitude Warfare School has over the years become the Army’s nodal agency for “specialised training and dissemination of doctrines” in high-altitude, mountain and snow warfare.

According to HAWS instructor Major S.S Negi, the museum was established to commemorate 1997′s first summit of Indian Army to Kanchenjunga.

Thereafter, other expeditions like first successful Everest expedition of 2001 were given a due place in the museum.

“In this portion of the museum, we have got two sand models which are related to the Kanchenjunga museum of 1977 and 2001 Everest expedition. Thereafter second position is dedicated to the equipment which is being used presently and which was used earlier by the mountaineering fraternity of Indian Army,” said Major S.S Negi.

The High Altitude Warfare School housing Kanchenjunga Museum draws young breed of soldiers, who are eager to see the equipments used by Indian army in high altitude warfare including Siachen Glacier, the world’s highest battlefield in the earlier days.

The soldiers undergoing training at the school are fascinated having watched some of the age-old equipments and the eminent mountaineers who used them.

“When I first visited this museum in 1998, I learnt the history about which I never had any idea. A thought came to my mind that what I could do for this history. During that procedure, I did a mountaineering course in 2001. I learnt about all the mountaineering equipments. I also came to know about all the eminent expedition mountaineers of India,” said Karma Singh, an Indian Army soldier.

The High-Altitude Warfare School was initially set up at Gulmarg, as a Formation Sickly School. The training imparted consisted mainly of skiing techniques, mountain lore and patrolling on skis.

On April 8, 1962, the School was designated a Category A Training establishment and renamed High Altitude Warfare School (HAWS).

The training instils confidence and stamina. The men are taught to integrate with the environment so that they can guard the Himalayan frontiers effectively. By Bilal Butt (ANI)

Glaciers in Southern Hemisphere are growing out of step with those in North

Washington, May 2 (ANI): A new study has found that for the last 7,000 years, glaciers south of the equator in South America and New Zealand have often moved out of step with glaciers in the Northern Hemisphere, pointing to strong regional variations in climate.

“This research should provide much more accurate reconstructions of glacial advances worldwide, allowing us in turn to make climate models more accurate,” said Paul Filmer, program director in the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Division of Earth Sciences, which funded the research.

Conventional wisdom holds that during the era of human civilization, climate has been relatively stable.

The new study is the latest to challenge this view, by showing that New Zealand’s glaciers have gone through rapid periods of growth and decline during the current interglacial period known as the Holocene.

“New Zealand’s mountain glaciers have fluctuated frequently over the last 7,000 years, and glacial advances have become slightly smaller through time,” said Joerg Schaefer, lead author of the paper and a geochemist at Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.

“This pattern differs in important ways from the northern hemisphere glaciers. The door is open now towards a global map of Holocene (a geological time period that began about 11,700 years ago and continues to the present) glacier fluctuations and how climate variations during this period impacted human civilizations,” he added.

By refining the analysis of a method called cosmogenic dating, Schaefer and colleagues were able for the first time to assign precise ages to young Holocene moraines.

They accomplished this by measuring minute levels of the chemical isotope beryllium 10 in the rocks, which is produced when cosmic rays strike rock surfaces, and builds up over time.

The researchers were thus able to pinpoint exactly when glaciers in New Zealand’s Southern Alps began to recede, exposing the rocks to the cosmic rays.

From the results, they constructed a glacial timeline for the past 7,000 years and compared it against historic records from the Swiss Alps and other places north of the equator.

They found that within that timeframe, the glaciers around Mount Cook, New Zealand’s highest peak, reached their largest extent about 6,500 years ago, when the Swiss Alps and Scandinavia were relatively warm.

That’s about 6,000 years before northern glaciers hit their Holocene peak during the Little Ice Age, between 1300 and 1860 AD.

That finding was a surprise to some scientists who assumed that the northern cold phase happened globally.

The record in New Zealand shows other disparities that point to regional climate variations in both hemispheres. (ANI)

Will Ferrell drinks his own urine to survive Man vs. Wild adventure!

Washington, Apr 24 (ANI): American actor/comedian Will Farrell was forced to drink his own urine to survive his expedition on the Discovery Channel’s Man vs. Wild.

The show’s host Bear Grylls went on a two-day joint expedition with the comedian in the Swedish hinterland.

Armed with only the most basic survival equipment, Grylls took Ferrell through the paces of real life survival in the ice-bound mountain and glacier ranges in the far north of Sweden.

Farrell, who participated in the show to promote his adventure comedy, Land of the Lost – what it takes to find food in the forests, had to drink his own urine and munch on reindeer eyes to survive the tough journey.

“To be able to participate in an episode of Man vs. Wild was a thrill of a lifetime, even though I did get urine-drunk which is sad,” Usmagazine quoted Ferrell as saying in a statement.

“Will did an amazing job in sub-zero, very unforgiving conditions,” said Grylls.

“He trusted me when it mattered and we survived. And he has definitely had an adventure! He should be very proud of how he performed,” he added. (ANI)

Siachen hero joins National Conference

Jammu, April 9 (IANS) A former Indian Army officer, decorated with the highest wartime gallantry medal – Param Vir Chakra – for capturing a Siachen glacier post, Thursday joined the ruling National Conference in Jammu and Kashmir.

Captain (retired) Bana Singh, who hails from the border area of Ranbirsinghpora, 30 km west of Jammu, will head the ex-servicemen wing of the National Conference.

The heroic exploit of then Naib Subedar Bana Singh battling Pakistani forces and steep climb at Siachen glacier in 1987 have been woven into folklores in the state.

Bana Singh in June 1987 led his men in a daring and secret operation to evict Pakistani intruders from a post on Siachen Glacier area, the world’s highest battlefield at an altitude of 21,000 feet.

The post he captured was virtually an impregnable glacier fortress with ice walls, 1,500 feet high, on both sides. It was renamed Bana Top in his honour. He was awarded the Param Vir Chakra for ‘conspicuous bravery and leadership under most adverse conditions’, said a citation by the Indian Army lauding his courage.

National Conference’s provincial president Rattan Lal Gupta said he was proud to announce the joining of Bana Singh into the party. ‘He is a brave soldier.’