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November 19 |
1997 |
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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1997
Researcher wins presidential award
for work on rain forests and rainfall
By Denise Brehm
News Office
An MIT scientist whose work provided evidence that deforestation
of specific sections of rain forest increases the prospect of
widespread regional drought was recently selected by President
Clinton to receive a Presidential Early Career Award for Science and
Engineering.
Dr. Elfatih Eltahir, the Gilbert Winslow Career Development
Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, was
nominated by NASA for the honor based on his work in
hydroclima-tology. The award cites Professor Eltahir's "outstanding
accomplishment in hydrology and hy-droclimatology by combining theory
and remote sensing observations to better understand the links
between the biosphere and the atmosphere and their implications for
regional water resources in the tropics."
"These gifted young professionals exemplify the best of our
science and technology community and will help set the scientific
pace for the United States and the world in the years ahead," said
President Clinton in announcing the 60 recipients. The award includes
up to $500,000 over a five-year period and is "the highest honor
bestowed by the US government on outstanding scientists and engineers
at the outset of their independent research careers."
Professor Eltahir studies how vegetative cover and soil
moisture content affect land-atmosphere-ocean interactions at the
regional level. Some of his recent work suggested that deforestation
along the southern coast of West Africa could cause a collapse of the
monsoon system and lead to notable decrease in rainfall for the
entire Sahel region.
"West Africa is a region that has seen both significant
deforestation activity and a decline in rainfall. We're asking if the
30-year drought is part of the natural variation in the system or is
caused by human activity," said Professor Eltahir.
He and postdoctoral assistant Xinyu Zheng published a paper in
Geophysical Research Letters earlier this year that described their
model of the West African monsoon and its response to deforestation
and desertification. Other researchers have suggested that
deforestation has an effect on climate, but this was the first
published study to suggest that the potential impact of the
deforestation depends on the precise location of the loss of
vegetative cover.
"Desertification along the border with the Sahara leaves a
relatively minor impact on monsoon circulation and regional rainfall;
deforestation along the southern coast of West Africa may result in
complete collapse of monsoon circulation, and a significant reduction
of regional rainfall," said the authors.
To create their model, Professor Eltahir and Dr. Zheng used
data obtained by NASA satellites and other sources. Among the
variables used by the model are surface temperature, rainfall, wind
and humidity, as well as atmospheric temperature and water vapor.
The research team is also modeling the hydrological cycle of
the American Midwest by studying atmospheric variables, soil moisture
and ground water levels in Illinois. Professor Eltahir hopes that a
clearer understanding of that cycle will help to determine if an
increase in greenhouse gases will cause drier summers in that major
agricultural region.
"Understanding these process in the current climate should
eventually help us to project the impact of future climate change on
water resources in the region," said Professor Eltahir, who plans to
present this work in December at a meeting of the American
Geophysical Union.
His assessment of the consequences of human activity on
regional climate will likely contribute to a broader understanding of
global climate change and its impact on water resources. "If we can
understand how the natural system works with regard to soil moisture
and rainfall, it will help us later to identify how any global change
scenario may impact the regional hydrology and water resources. Such
impacts represent a serious threat to the sustainability of water
resources," he said.
November 19 |
1997 |
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