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London: Climate change scientists are heading to the Himalayas in a bid to become the first team to successfully drill through the world's highest glacier located in the foothills of Mount Everest.
An international research team will spend up to six weeks working at an altitude of more than 5,000 metres on the Khumbu glacier in Nepal and will be using a specially adapted car wash unit to drill up to 200 metres into the ice.
Once the drilling has been completed, the team, led by Duncan Quincey from University of Leeds in the UK, will be able to study the glacier's internal structure, measure its temperature, how quickly it flows and how water drains through it.
"All the current data collected on these glaciers only just scratches the surface," Quincey said.
"The data we will collect during this expedition is critical for us to be able to forecast how this glacier, as well as others in the region, will respond to climate change," he said.
Glacier melt-water from across the Himalayan range supports the livelihoods of around 40 per cent of the world's population, researchers said.
However, dams and lakes that form on the glacier present a significant risk of flash flooding for people living down-stream.
"Understanding what actually happens inside these glaciers is critical to developing a better understanding of how they flow so that we can better predict when dams that form on these glaciers are likely to be breached, releasing vast volumes of water to the valleys below," said Professor Bryn Hubbard from Aberystwyth University in the UK.
"This is a real risk in the Himalayas as it is in other regions such as the Andes, and has the potential to endanger the lives of thousands of people," said Hubbard.
Located in north-eastern Nepal, the 17 kilometre-long Khumbu glacier is often used by climbers on their way to Everest base-camp and flows from an altitude of 7,600 metres.
The team will be working at an altitude of over 5,000 metres and will have to contend with a number of physical and technical challenges.
Equipment weighing about 1,500kg will need to be transported to the drill site on the glacier.
Half the equipment will be airlifted by helicopter and half will be carried up by locally-hired Sherpa, yaks and the research team.
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