Tag: Seoul National University

  • Groundwater pumping by humans has caused the Earth’s axis to tilt – New study

    Groundwater pumping by humans has caused the Earth’s axis to tilt – New study

    A new study found that the inexhaustible human hunger for groundwater has drained so much water from underground reservoirs that it is altering the tilt of the Earth.

    When it doesn’t rain much, groundwater assists with crop irrigation and provides drinking water for humans, livestock, and plants. The axis on which our globe rotates has been moved, however, according to recent research, tilting it over to the east at a rate of around 1.7 inches (4.3 centimetres) each year as a result of chronic groundwater extraction over a period of more than 10 years.

    According to a study published on June 15 in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, this shift is so noticeable that it can even be seen on the surface of the Earth. It causes the sea level to increase globally.

    “Earth’s rotational pole actually changes a lot,” said lead study author Ki-Weon Seo, a professor in the department of Earth science education at Seoul National University in South Korea, in a news release. “Our study shows that among climate-related causes, the redistribution of groundwater actually has the largest impact on the drift of the rotational pole.”

    You might not be able to feel Earth’s rotation, but it’s spinning on a north-south axis at a rate of about 1,000 miles per hour (1,609 kilometers per hour).

    The ebb and flow of seasonal change is linked to the angle of the planet’s rotational axis, and over geologic time, a wandering axis could affect climate on a global scale, said Surendra Adhikari, a research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in the release. Adhikari was not involved in the study.

    Earth’s interior is layered with rock and magma surrounding a dense, hot core. But in the outermost rocky layer, there are also vast quantities of water. Below the planet’s surface, rocky reservoirs known as aquifers are estimated to contain over 1,000 times more water than all the surface rivers and lakes in the world.

    Between 1993 and 2010, the period examined in the study, humans extracted more than 2,150 gigatons of groundwater from inside Earth, mostly in western North America and northwestern India, according to estimates published in 2010. To put that into perspective, if that amount were poured into the ocean, it would raise global sea levels by about 0.24 inches (6 millimeters).

    In 2016, another team of researchers found that drift in Earth’s rotational axis between 2003 and 2015 could be linked to changes in the mass of glaciers and ice sheets, as well as the planet’s reserves of terrestrial liquid water.

    In fact, any mass change on Earth, including atmospheric pressure, can affect its axis of rotation, Seo told CNN in an email.

    But axis changes caused by atmospheric pressure shifts are periodic, which means that the rotational pole wanders and then returns to its prior position, Seo explained. Seo and his colleagues had questions about long-term changes to the axis — specifically, how groundwater contributed to that phenomenon. It had not been calculated in prior research.

    Shifts in Earth’s axis are measured indirectly through radio telescope observations of immobile objects in space — quasars — using them as fixed points of reference. For the new study, scientists took the 2010 data about groundwater extraction and incorporated it into computer models, alongside observational data about surface ice loss and sea level rise, and estimates of rotational pole changes.

    The researchers then evaluated sea level variations “using the groundwater mass change from the model,” to pinpoint how much of the axis shift was caused by groundwater pumping alone, Seo said.

    The redistribution of groundwater tilted Earth’s rotational axis east by more than 31 inches (78.7 centimeters) in just under two decades, according to the models. The most notable driver of long-term variations in the rotational axis was already known to be mantle flow — the movement of molten rock in the layer between Earth’s crust and outer core. The new modeling reveals that groundwater extraction is the second most significant factor, Seo said.

    “This is a nice contribution and an important documentation,” Adhikari said. “They’ve quantified the role of groundwater pumping on polar motion, and it’s pretty significant.”

    Future models can use observations on Earth’s rotation to illuminate the past, Seo added. “The data is available since the late 19th century,” he said. With that information, scientists can peer back in time and trace changes in planetary systems as the climate warmed over the last 100 years.

    Groundwater pumping can be a lifeline, particularly in parts of the world that are heavily affected by drought caused by climate change. But subterranean reserves of liquid water are finite; once drained, they are slow to replenish.

    And groundwater extraction doesn’t merely deplete a valuable resource; the new findings demonstrate that this activity has unintended global consequences.

    “We have affected Earth systems in various ways,” Seo said. “People need to be aware of that.”

  • Major Earth-related suspicions confirmed by researchers

    Major Earth-related suspicions confirmed by researchers

    If you’ve ever served customers, you are aware of how quickly a tray may fall off balance when drinks are moved about.

    As it turns out, Earth also faces this issue.

    The earth has tilted due to the amount of water that humans have removed from the ground and distributed elsewhere on the surface.

    Previous estimates have suggested more than 2,150 gigatons of groundwater was extracted between 1993 and 2010, equivalent to more than 6 millimetres of sea level rise.

    However, scientists had difficulty confirming those figures – until now.

    The Earth’s rotational pole – the point around which it spins, as opposed to its magnetic pole – migrates regularly, but a recent shift of almost 80 centimetres couldn’t be explained by the movement of ice sheets and glaciers alone. The calculations were off by 78.5cm.

    But by adding the groundwater estimates, the modelling matched the movement – proving that extracting subterranean water not only shifted the Earth’s axis, but is a major source of sea level rise.

    ‘Earth’s rotational pole actually changes a lot,’ said lead author Dr Ki-Weon Seo, a geophysicist at Seoul National University.

    ‘Our study shows that among climate-related causes, the redistribution of groundwater actually has the largest impact on the drift of the rotational pole.’

    The study showed Earth’s axis is tilting by 4.3cm a year.

    ‘I’m very glad to find the unexplained cause of the rotation pole drift,’ said Dr Seo. 

    ‘On the other hand, as a resident of Earth and a father, I’m concerned and surprised to see that pumping groundwater is another source of sea level rise.’

    Between the years studied, the largest volume of water was redistributed in North America and northwestern India. Both are found at midlatitudes, which have a greater impact on the rotational pole.

    ‘Observing changes in Earth’s rotational pole is useful for understanding continent-scale water storage variations,’ said Dr Seo.

    ‘Polar motion data are available from as early as the 19th century, so we can potentially use those data to understand continental water storage variations during the last 100 years.’