Huge
Antarctic shelf 'hanging by a thread'
Scientists
monitoring a rift in an Antarctic ice shelf where an iceberg a
quarter the size of Wales is poised to break off say the huge crack
in the ice has spread.
2
May, 2017
Late
last year a rift in the Larsen C Ice Shelf grew suddenly by around
18km, leaving a vast iceberg more than 5,000 square kilometres
"hanging by a thread".
Just
20km of ice connects the iceberg to the rest of the ice shelf,
according to researchers from the Swansea University-led Midas
project, which has been studying the stability of the Larsen C Ice
Shelf for three years.
The
main rift continued to grow early this year and is currently 180km
long.
Now
satellite data has revealed a second branch of the rift, some 15km
long, which is moving towards the edge of the ice.
When
the ice breaks off it is likely to lead to one of the biggest
icebergs ever recorded.
Professor
Adrian Luckman, of Swansea University College of Science and head of
Project Midas, said: "While the previous rift tip has not
advanced, a new branch of the rift has been initiated.
"This
is approximately 10km behind the previous tip, heading towards the ic-front."
He
said it was the first significant change to the rift since February,
but added: "Although the rift length has been static for several
months, it has been steadily widening, at rates in excess of a metre
per day."
And
he said: "When it calves, the Larsen C Ice Shelf will lose more
than 10 per cent of its area to leave the ice front at its most
retreated position ever recorded; this event will fundamentally
change the landscape of the Antarctic Peninsula."
The
researchers warned the ice shelf will be less stable after the
iceberg calves, and could follow the example of its neighbouring ice
shelf Larsen B, which disintegrated in 2002 after a similar event.
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