Vast
rivers and waterfalls discovered across Antarctica
'This
is not in the future – this is widespread now'
A 120m-wide waterfall
drains from the Nansen Ice
Shelf into the ocean (Won Sang Lee/Korea Polar Research Institute)
20
April, 2017
Water
is flowing across Antarctica in vast rivers, lakes and waterfalls and
has been for decades, scientists have discovered.
While
temporary meltwater streams have been encountered before by polar
explorers like Ernest Shackleton, it was thought liquid water was
relatively rare because the continent is so cold.
However
a
new study of aerial photography and satellite images found
“widespread drainage of meltwater” as far south as 600km (375
miles) from the South Pole and as high as 1,300m above sea level –
about the same height as Ben Nevis.
This
included rivers of up to 120km, 80km-long lakes and waterfalls that
were 120m across.
The
researchers warned the amount of liquid they had found could increase
the rate of melting on Antarctica above currently expected levels. If
all the continent’s ice was lost, a process that would likely take
centuries, this would raise sea levels by about 60m worldwide.
A
paper about the research in the journal Nature said: “Large-scale
surface drainage could deliver water to areas of ice shelves
vulnerable to collapse, as melt rates increase this century.
“While
Antarctic surface melt ponds are relatively well documented on some
ice shelves, we have discovered that ponds often form part of
widespread, large-scale surface drainage systems.
“In
a warming climate, enhanced surface drainage could accelerate future
ice-mass loss from Antarctic, potentially via positive feedbacks
between the extent of exposed rock, melting and thinning of the ice
sheet.”
Professor
Jonathan Kingslake, a glaciologist at Columbia University’s
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, said their findings had been a
surprise.
“This
is not in the future – this is widespread now, and has been for
decades,” he said.
“I
think most polar scientists have considered water moving across the
surface of Antarctica to be extremely rare.
“But
we found a lot of it, over very large areas.”
The
researchers were unable to tell whether the amount of meltwater
streams had been increasing over the last 70 years, the period for
which images exist, because there was not enough data.
“Looking
forward, it will be really important to work out how these systems
will change in response to warming, and how this will affect the ice
sheets,” Professor Kingslake said.
His
colleague, Professor Robin Bell, also of Columbia, added it was
likely to increase the rate of ice-loss in the future.
“This
study tells us there's already a lot more melting going on than we
thought,” she said.
READ
MORE: Antarctic sees highest level of greenhouse gas in 4 million
years
“When
you turn up the temperature, it's only going to increase.”
However,
in a related study of the Nansen Ice Shelf led by Professor Bell,
researchers found that meltwater streams could actually help prevent
the break-up of ice by carrying water away.
Water
is darker than ice so absorbs more of the sun’s energy, increasing
the temperature and therefore the amount of melting. It also has
other structural affects which can weaken the ice.
Ice
shelves float on the sea, so would not contribute to sea level rise
themselves, but they help hold back land glaciers which do.
Research
in Greenland has shown that surface meltwater streams also speed up
the rate of ice loss, by cutting through glaciers and then
lubricating their passage over the ground.
In
a commentary in Nature, Dr Alison Banwell, of the Scott Polar
Research Institute at Cambridge University, said the overall effect
of the newly discovered amount of Antarctic meltwater was unclear.
“The
extent to which meltwater production will enhance ice-shelf
instability is debatable,” she said.
“It
was previously suggested that the development of hundreds of surface
lakes could provide the tipping point, which, once reached, would
trigger the break-up of an ice shelf.
“If
this is true, many ice shelves could be exposed to an ever-increasing
risk of break-up, given their already extensive lake coverage.
“However,
such a threshold might not be reached if surface water can instead be
efficiently exported from the ice shelf to the ocean through large
river networks.”
She
stressed the need to work out exactly what would happen.
“Given
that the Antarctic Ice Sheet contains enough ice to raise global sea
levels by 60m, identifying and quantifying the role of all surface
and subsurface processes on the potential stability of ice shelves is
becoming increasingly important.”
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