We
don't get much news from Antarctica.
I
went to a film on the Ross Sea recently and was surprised and shocked
by how little is known about ice melt in Antarctica.
Patagonian
Glaciers Are Rapidly Melting, Report Finds
Ice
fields in southern South America are rapidly losing volume and in
most cases thinning at even the highest elevations, contributing to
sea-level rise at "substantially higher" rates than
observed from the 1970s through the 1990s, according to a study
published Wednesday.
8
September, 2012
The rapid melting, based
on satellite observations, suggests the ice field's contribution to
global sea-level rise has increased by half since the end of the 20th
century, jumping from 0.04 millimeters per year to about .07 mm, and
accounting for 2 percent of annual sea-level rise since 1998.
The
southern and northern Patagonian ice fields are the largest mass of
ice in the southern hemisphere outside of Antarctica. The findings
spell trouble for other glaciers worldwide, according to the study's
lead author, Cornell University researcher Michael Willis.
"Patagonia
is kind of a poster child for rapidly changing glacier systems,"
he said in a statement. The region, he added, "is supplying
water to sea-level at a big rate compared to its size."
The
study was published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
Melting
glaciers, both in South America and the Himalaya, are a major concern
to populations downstream who depend on the ice fields as a reservoir
providing a steady summer water supply for drinking and agriculture.
Scientists
suspect the Andes, for instance, have already surpassed "peak
water" and that hundreds of thousands of people living
downstream of the glaciers in Peru and Ecuador now face a future of
lower flows and increased variability in local rivers.
The
new study compared satellite imagery from two different missions over
a 12-year period starting in 2000. On average, they found, the
Southern Patagonian Icefield glaciers thinned by about six feet per
year during that period.
Some
glaciers were stagnant; others even advanced slightly, Willis said.
"But on the whole, retreat and thinning is prevalent."
Warming
air temperatures contributed to the thinning throughout the mountain
range, Willis noted. And the warmer temperatures increased the
chances that rain – as opposed to snow – would fall on and around
the glaciers. That double threat increases the amount of water under
the glaciers, decreasing friction and moving more ice to the oceans,
he said.
Other
researchers said the new study could provide valuable information for
future predictions, said Alex Gardner, an assistant professor at
Clark University in Massachusetts, who was not involved in the study
but researches glaciers and ice sheets.
"A
study like this really provides a strong data set to validate and
calibrate glacial models," he said in a statement
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