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Loso SS 7/23/2014 The trajectory and fate of crevassed human waste on Denali Michael G. Loso, Ph.D. Katelyn Goodwin, MS Haley Williams, BS Rich Johnson, BS Dustin English, BA *Alaska Pacific University Matthias Braun, Ph.D. *University of Erlangen Funded by Denali National Park and Preserve

Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

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Page 1: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

The trajectory and fate of crevassed human waste on DenaliMichael G. Loso, Ph.D.Katelyn Goodwin, MSHaley Williams, BSRich Johnson, BSDustin English, BA*Alaska Pacific University

Matthias Braun, Ph.D.*University of Erlangen

Funded by Denali National Park and Preserve

Page 2: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

The trajectory and fate of crevassed human waste on DenaliMichael G. Loso, Ph.D.Katelyn Goodwin, MSHaley Williams, BSRich Johnson, BSDustin English, BA*Alaska Pacific University

Matthias Braun, Ph.D.*University of Erlangen

Funded by Denali National Park and Preserve

Page 3: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Page 4: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

The ProblemKahiltna Glacier is the busiest “trail” in the Denali National Park

wilderness, and it has the least capacity to degrade human waste

Cumulative waste burial 1951-2012:

68 metric tons

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

0

500

1000

1500

2000

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Year

Num

ber

of c

limbi

ng a

ttem

pts

Esti

mat

ed a

nnua

l hum

an w

aste

(k

g)

Page 5: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Our Questions

• Trajectory– Where will it emerge?– When?

• Fate– Bacterial survival in glacial environments?– Present in runoff?

• Solutions– Carbon and cost accounting– Weighing costs and risks

Burial

Emergence

Accumulation zone

Ablation zone

Equilibrium line

Page 6: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Trajectory I: Glacier velocities

• Stake measurements and feature tracking

• Glacier-wide: 0-400 m/yr• Climbing route: 20-120

m/yr

Page 7: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Trajectory II: Flowline velocities

Velocities

Elevations

Page 8: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Trajectory III: Mass balance• ELA 1879 m• Ablation zone gradient 0.0031 m weq/m• Accumulation zone gradient 0.0008 m

weq/m

Page 9: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Emergence predictions

• Expected first emergence 2025

• With errors, possible now• No evidence yet located

210 years

142 years

102 years71 years

Page 10: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Effects of climatic warming

warmer / less snow

Emergence times shorten by 13-27% in response to a 10% rise (188 m) in ELA

Page 11: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Bacterial survival I: Lab experiments

Kat

ie G

oodw

in p

hoto

s

• 150 day freezer experiments• Constant 0° C or modest

freeze-thaw• UV or no UV• Consistent results: no

detectable microbial mortality

Page 12: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Bacterial survival II: Burial experiment

• One-year waste burial experiment at base camp

• Still biologically active

Page 13: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Bacterial survival III: surface exposure

10 m

• fecal coliform and E. coli present in pee holes near camps

• Improper disposal common on summit day

• coliform and E. coli present in year old surface samples from 18,900’ and base camp

Page 14: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Surface runoffContamination in eastern channel of Kahiltna River• E. coli and total coliform• Higher than drinking water

standards, but safe for “recreational waters”

• No contaminants elsewhere

• Consistent with findings of Whiteman et al. (Switzerland, 2005)

Page 15: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Summary of findings

• Present management strategy mostly effective, along climbing route, in keeping glacier surface clean

• Waste will emerge on glacier surface within decades• Emergent waste will be intact and biologically active• Buried waste already contaminates Kahiltna River• Emergent waste will contaminate surface waters, too

Page 16: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Solutions

Page 17: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Carbon and cost accounting: 3 options1. Current Practice

• 1 CMC each• Crevasse-dumping• CMC’s flown off from Base

Camp by air taxis• Most waste remains on

mountain2. Intermediate

• 1 CMC each• No crevasse-dumping• Full CMC’s traded at 14,200

Camp for clean ones, flown off by helicopter

• All waste removed3. Full Packout

• 2 CMC’s each• No crevasse-dumping• All waste carried to Base

Camp, flown off by air taxis• All waste removed

Page 18: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

Carbon and cost accounting II

• Up-front costs dominated by purchase of CMCs

• Operating costs dominated by use (or not) of helicopter

• Up-front emissions dominated by shipping of CMCs from Kansas

• Operating emissions sensitive to use of helicopter and road-hauling to wastewater treatment plant

Page 19: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

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Weighing costs and risks

Page 20: Michael Loso - The Trajectory and Fate of Crevassed Human Waste on Denali

Loso SS 7/23/2014

FINANCIAL SUPPORTDenali National Park and PreserveMurie Science and Learning CenterAlaska Pacific University

FIELD ASSISTANCENPS mountaineering rangers and patrol membersJill MichalakAnthony ArendtJoanna YoungJT Thomas

LAB AND LOGISTICAL SUPPORTRusty MyersJason GeckMatt HeavnerPaul BrusseauChad HultsLouis Sass

Thanks