Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Slippery Slopes, Sure Death: Ice Climber Helping Climate Science Research

The Canadian Press, 04 Mar, 2019 06:28 PM

    From climbing the frozen Niagara Falls to setting world paragliding records, Will Gadd is no stranger to adventure.

     

    Rappelling into a hole to descend deep into the bowels of the Greenland ice cap, however, was a whole different matter.


    "Safe is a relative term," laughs the mountaineer based in Canmore, Alta. "These moulins (vertical shafts) are not safe. There are a lot of things that can go wrong.


    "But for research, it's worth it."


    Gadd has earned a reputation as one of the world's top ice climbers. He has records, prizes, first ascents and personal achievements from around the globe.


    Now he's offering his alpine passion and skill to the research community by taking scientists into places they couldn't reach on their own to study the impact of climate change on the high altitudes he loves.


    "I've been in the mountains now for so long I've seen them change radically," Gadd said in a recent interview.


    "If I'm flying my paraglider over the mountains, all of our glaciers look like they've got a bad case of bathtub rings. You can very graphically see where they were in relatively recent history."


    Old maps are wrong. Routes for popular climbs have changed.


    "The way we approach the mountains now has to be different," Gadd suggested. "The glaciers are changing so quickly.


    "It's not some abstract thing. It's obvious. In our lifetime we're seeing radical changes and it's not something I can ignore."


    Gadd had long been climbing into moulins — holes in glaciers that drain surface water which sometimes carves extensive caves under the ice. Originally, it was just a fun way to ice climb in the summer.


    But he grew curious about what was actually down there. He got in touch with a University of Alberta glaciologist and in 2016 the two began descending into the Athabasca Glacier in the Rocky Mountains.


    Those expeditions found thin layers of micro-organisms living deep within the ice.


    "Next thing you know, I'm involved in all these research projects under the Athabasca Glacier."


    Eventually, Gadd contacted U.S. scientist Jason Gulley, who works on the Greenland ice sheet — 1.7 million square kilometres of ice an average of two kilometres thick. The two worked out a plan to climb 100 metres down into a moulin in the hope of diving once they hit water.


    They made their attempt last fall. The ice was too unstable to let them descend as far as planned — but they still got plenty deep.


    "It is one of the coolest places I've ever been in in my life," said Gadd. "It's this whole world that's been sculpted by water in the ice.


    "It's just surreal and incredibly beautiful. It's like the beautiful red sandstone slot canyons in Utah, but blue ice. It's a magical world. It feels very alien.


    It was challenging, too, he said.


    "A lot of times you have to climb on the walls to get over water-filled passages. Who would expect open water at -30 C in a glacier?


    "You need a hodgepodge of MacGyver-style trickery to move around in these places. It's all slippery slopes leading to sure death."


    Those experiences have marked him.


    "I'll never look at a glacier the same way again. I used to think of glaciers as blocks of ice chundering down the mountain, (but) there's life in there and it's like Swiss cheese in there. There's a whole world that you just can't see from the surface."


    Gadd is planning to set out Monday on a cross-Canada lecture tour to talk about his work with researchers to understand the changing climate and alpine environment.


    Climbing for its own sake is great, he said. But, at 52, he's hoping for something a little more from his prodigious skill set.


    "Using some of those skills I've developed in my career to help people move around in the glaciers and further our understanding of the world is a good use," he said.


    "It's a small legacy, but if you can make a little bit of a difference, I think that's worthwhile."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Brunswick Looks To Hydrogen From Seawater As Fuel For Future Power

    FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's Crown-owned power utility is partnering with a Florida-based company to develop power plants that would use hydrogen extracted from seawater as their fuel.

    New Brunswick Looks To Hydrogen From Seawater As Fuel For Future Power

    Man Facing Deportation To Italy More Than Two Decades After Conviction Loses Stay Request

    Man Facing Deportation To Italy More Than Two Decades After Conviction Loses Stay Request
    MONTREAL — A Quebec man convicted more than 20 years ago for his role in a Mafia-linked drug importation will be deported to his native Italy this week barring a last-minute reprieve from Ottawa.

    Man Facing Deportation To Italy More Than Two Decades After Conviction Loses Stay Request

    Measles Unlikely To Spread But Everyone Should Be Vaccinated: Vancouver Doctor

    Measles Unlikely To Spread But Everyone Should Be Vaccinated: Vancouver Doctor
    A medical health officer in Vancouver says measles is not expected to spread beyond a cluster of patients but anyone travelling to other parts of the world

    Measles Unlikely To Spread But Everyone Should Be Vaccinated: Vancouver Doctor

    Soldier Found Dead On New Brunswick Base Was Veteran Of Afghanistan, Bosnia

    Soldier Found Dead On New Brunswick Base Was Veteran Of Afghanistan, Bosnia
    OROMOCTO, N.B. — The Canadian Armed Forces has released the name of a soldier and Afghanistan veteran found dead at New Brunswick's Gagetown base on Monday.    

    Soldier Found Dead On New Brunswick Base Was Veteran Of Afghanistan, Bosnia

    B.C. Moves On Consumer Protections With Payday Loan Law Amendments

    B.C. Moves On Consumer Protections With Payday Loan Law Amendments
    VICTORIA — British Columbia is amending consumer protection law to offer more safeguards for people forced to turn to high-cost loan services and risk being caught in an endless cycle of debt payments.

    B.C. Moves On Consumer Protections With Payday Loan Law Amendments

    Liberals' Bump In Child Benefits Fuels Poverty Rate Drop, Statistics Canada Says

    OTTAWA — The national statistics office says fewer children are living in poverty and it is connecting the drop to the Liberal government's signature child benefit.

    Liberals' Bump In Child Benefits Fuels Poverty Rate Drop, Statistics Canada Says