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Snows of Kilimanjaro rapidly melting

November 7, 2009

The snows of Kilimanjaro may soon be gone.

The African mountain's white peak -- made famous by writer Ernest Hemingway -- is rapidly melting, researchers report.

About 85 percent of the ice that made up the mountaintop glaciers in 1912 was gone by 2007, researchers led by paleoclimatologist Lonnie Thompson of Ohio State University report in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

And more than a quarter of the ice present in 2000 was gone by 2007.

If current conditions continue "the ice fields atop Kilimanjaro will not endure," the researchers said.

The Kilimanjaro glaciers are both shrinking -- as the ice at their edges melts -- and thinning, researchers found.

Similar changes are reported at Mount Kenya and the Rwenzori Mountains in Africa and at glaciers in South America and the Himalayas.

"The increase of Earth's near-surface temperatures, coupled with even greater increases in the mid- to upper-tropical troposphere . . . would at least partially explain" the observations, Thompson said.

Changes in cloudiness and snowfall also may be involved, though they appear less important, according to the study.

AP