The loss of ‘eternal ice’ threatens Mongolian reindeer herders’ way of life

Patches of long-frozen
snowpack and ice in the Mongolian steppes are rapidly vanishing — with dire
consequences for the reindeer and herders who rely on the icy spots.

About 30 families, members
of the Tsaatan people
(SN: 1/14/03), live within a remote
part of northern Mongolia called the Ulaan Taiga Special Protected Area. Interviews
with some of these families have let researchers create a never-before-recorded
history of this frozen resource, and gain new insight into how quickly it is
vanishing.

During the summer, the Tsaatan
bring their reindeer herds to a treeless, tundra valley region called
Mengebulag. There, numerous large patches of snow and ice have historically persisted,
regardless of season, for decades, perhaps longer. The people call these
patches “eternal ice,” or munkh mus.

The ice is an important
source of freshwater for families, and reindeer lie on it to cool themselves
and seek respite from biting insects, says William Taylor, an archaeologist at University
of Colorado Boulder and the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human
History in Jena, Germany. Without the cooling and insect-suppressing ice, the
herders told researchers, the animals are more vulnerable
to parasite-borne illnesses, and are also increasingly heat-stressed, which
reduces their immunity to disease (SN:
12/23/16
).

“These folks are immediately
experiencing the consequences, because of the way their livelihood is tied to
the animals, and tied to the water,” Taylor says. He and his colleagues recount
these people’s ethnographic history, increasingly recognized as an important
part of documenting ongoing climate change, in a study published online November 20 in PLOS ONE.

Mongolia is one of the
driest countries in the world, but “mountains provide these unique
microenvironments, where the seasonal precipitation is banked up in the form of
snowpack,” Taylor says. That has allowed people to live and herd animals
throughout the country.

But many of the ice patches
appeared to be shrinking, or even vanishing, Taylor and his colleagues have
noted on repeat visits to the region. To learn more about where and when the
ice began to vanish, the researchers interviewed, in Mongolian, members of
three families with summer camps in the region and who have visited the ice
patches year after year. Loss of eternal ice patches appears to have accelerated
in the last decade, the families reported; many long-standing patches melted
away completely during the summers of 2016, 2017 and 2018.  

Tsaatan herder summer camp in 2017
Heat-stressed reindeer lie in the dirt near one of the Tsaatan herders’ summer camps in 2017, where an ice patch once existed. The absence of ice patches can affect reindeer in several ways, according to Mongolian herders. Heat-stressed reindeer have lowered immunity to disease; there is less freshwater available to drink; and because the ice reduces insect activity, lack of it makes the reindeer more vulnerable to parasite-borne diseases.Myagmar Nansalmaa

“The really troubling
stories were the ones where the families took us to where patches used to be,
and now they are just barren rock faces,” Taylor says. “The term munkh mus —it’s a term of respect,” he adds. “They don’t use ‘eternal’
lightly in the Mongolian language. And the loss is, in many ways, felt as a
tragic one.”

The study doesn’t analyze
how the loss of these ice patches is related to warming temperatures in the
region. But the team notes that average temperatures in Mongolia as of 2001
were already 1.5 degrees Celsius higher than the 20th century average,
according to a United Nations climate change report.

Using locations given by the
families as well as satellite data from 2016 and 2017, the researchers did
visit 11 existing ice patches and two sites that were covered in ice in 2016
but are now completely melted. Those surveys, by horseback, yielded wooden
artifacts, once buried by the ice, that Taylor says represent clues to the
history of reindeer herding in the region. For instance, a long, cylindrical
wooden stick may have been a “scaring stick,” an object herders still use to
control the behavior of wild reindeer, the herders told researchers. Lines of
such sticks, placed upright in the snow, can trigger the animals’ instincts to
shy away from a location.

Carbon-14 dating suggests
these artifacts were used in the 1960s or 1970s, the team found. Melting ice
patches may have previously exposed many other, perhaps older, organic
artifacts, once preserved in ice that have already degraded away. “After those
are gone, it’s impossible to backtrack and extrapolate what may have been lost,”
Taylor says.

Since the early 2000s, similar
finds have begun emerging from melting ice in Norway, North America and in the
Alps, says Lars Holger Pilø,
a glacial archaeologist with the Glacier Archaeology Program in Oppland, Norway.
Now, scientists are racing to collect oral histories and vulnerable artifacts
at rapidly melting sites in remote areas. “Many of the finds are in organic
materials that are not preserved elsewhere, but which have survived hundreds or
thousands of years inside the ice like in a time machine,” Pilø says.

Taylor’s group is the first
to undertake such glacial archaeology work in Mongolia, Pilø
says. “They are doing really important
work.” The ethnographic information “adds meat to the bone, so to speak. It
makes it easier to understand why finds are made in ice patches and glaciers
and how the finds should be interpreted.”

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