• Latest
  • Trending
Clues to ancient climate found in Ladakh

Clues to ancient climate found in Ladakh

June 4, 2023
heart attack

Study shows kidney drug can boost treatment for heart attack patients

September 2, 2024
Swaminathan

RBI’s stringent actions intended to protect customers: Swaminathan

September 2, 2024
Dhanush, Shourya and Vania

Dhanush, Shourya and Vania trio break world record in Air Rifle at Deaf World Championships

September 2, 2024
Indian equity indices opened flat on August 29 due to negative cues from Asian and US markets

Sensex closes above 82,500 points for first time ever

September 2, 2024
coal

India’s coal production sees 6.48 pc growth at 384 MT in April-August

September 2, 2024
railways

Cabinet nod to Rs 18,036 cr project to connect Mumbai, Indore via shortest rail route

September 2, 2024
telecom manufacturing

Aim to democratise telecom services under Digital Bharat Nidhi initiative

September 2, 2024
ace ev

Indian commercial vehicle industry reverses decline, to see modest growth in FY25

September 2, 2024
India’s manufacturing growth

India’s manufacturing growth eases in August, stays above long-run average

September 2, 2024
Supreme Court

SC dismisses PIL seeking caste-based census

September 2, 2024

Indian Navy’s P-8I lands in France, marking its first ever deployment in Europe

September 2, 2024
PM Modi congratulates Nishad Kumar

PM Modi congratulates Nishad Kumar on winning silver medal in Paralympics

September 2, 2024
Blitz India UK Edition
Contact
Download
  • Home
  • Booming Britain
  • G20 Podium
  • Legal
  • Specials
  • National
    • East
    • West
    • South
    • North
  • News
  • Education
  • Videos
  • Contact
No Result
View All Result
Welcome To Blitz India Media
No Result
View All Result

Clues to ancient climate found in Ladakh

by Blitzindiamedia
June 4, 2023
in News
0
Clues to ancient climate found in Ladakh
0
SHARES
1
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Team Blitz India

LADAKH: Secrets hidden in ancient lake sediment deposits recovered from the Indus River valley in Ladakh have helped retrace the climate since last deglaciation from 19.6 to 6.1 thousand years, paving the path towards understanding climate variation during the era.

Researchers have reconstructed millennial to centennial-scale climate records from the paleolake deposits and identified a cold arid period, followed by strong monsoon period and subsequent weakening monsoon phase with enhanced El Nino activities with climate variations in the Last Glacial Maxima.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE

Study shows kidney drug can boost treatment for heart attack patients

RBI’s stringent actions intended to protect customers: Swaminathan

Ladakh region in the TransHimalaya forms an environmental boundary between North Atlantic and monsoon forcings. Its location is ideal to gain insight into the variations of the atmospheric circulations like westerly and Indian summer monsoon.

A comprehensive understanding in the variability of these atmospheric circulations is essential, particularly in the wake of global warming. Besides plethora of sedimentary archives exist in the region that can be used to extract past climate information. Among them, the sediment deposits in lakes, due to their continuous sedimentation rate, are useful in attesting both short and long-term climatic changes.

Therefore many studies from the Ladakh region have been attempted from lacustrine sequences to provide information about climate change. However, most of these studies are focused only in the Holocene period (around last 10 thousand years), and older periods are less addressed.

Noticing the presence of numerous ancient lake deposits all along the Indus River that were easy to identify, continuous, and accessible, scientists from Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences (BSIP), an autonomous institute of Department of Science and Technology, sampled sediments from 18 m thick sediment sequence at an altitude of 3287 m and carried out meticulous laboratory analysis of the samples.

They used physical characteristics like colour texture, grain size, grain composition, total organic carbon, and magnetic parameters of sediments to extract past climate information from the palaeolake sedimentary archive. This was used to reconstruct palaeoclimate variations of the period.

The researchers found that cold arid climate influenced by westerly circulation reigned for the last 19.6 to 11.1 ka (thousand years).

Thereafter from 11.1 to 7.5 ka, monsoon forcings dominated the climate of the region, following which the orbitally controlled solar insolation took over, influencing the position of Inter Tropical Convergence Zone and was the key driver of the variability of these atmospheric circulations

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Blitzindiamedia News Subscription

Search

No Result
View All Result
Welcome To Blitz India Media

© 2023 Blitz India Media -Blitz India Building A New Nation

Navigate Site

  • Booming Britain
  • G20 Podium
  • New India
  • Legal
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • The Blitz
  • G20 Podium
  • National
    • East
    • West
    • South
    • North
  • Focus
  • Opinion
  • Booming Britain
  • Perspective
  • Legal
  • Specials
  • Download

© 2023 Blitz India Media -Blitz India Building A New Nation