Iceberg
bigger than Chicago breaks off Antarctica glacier
A
massive iceberg, larger than the city of Chicago, broke off
Antarctica's Pine Island Glacier on Monday and is now floating freely
in the Amundsen Sea, according to a team of German scientists
NBC,
10
July, 2013
The
newborn iceberg measures about 278 square miles (720 square
kilometers), and was seen by TerraSAR-X, an earth-observing satellite
operated by the German Space Agency (DLR). Scientists with NASA's
Operation IceBridge first discovered a giant
crack in the Pine Island Glacier in
October 2011, as they were flying over and surveying the sprawling
ice sheet.
At
that time, the fissure spanned about 15 miles (24 kilometers) in
length and 164 feet (50 meters) in width, according to researchers at
the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in
Bremerhaven, Germany. In May 2012, satellite images revealed a second
rift had formed near the northern side of the first crack.
"As
a result of these cracks, one giant iceberg broke away from the
glacier tongue," Angelika Humbert, a glaciologist at the Alfred
Wegener Institute, said in a statement. [Photo
Gallery: Antarctica’s Pine Island Glacier Cracks]
Humbert
and her colleagues studied high resolution radar images taken by the
TerraSAR-X satellite to track the changes in the two cracks, and to
observe the processes behind glacier movements.
A
topographic map of Antarctica; the Pine Island Glacier is marked in
red.
As
the Pine
Island Glacier retreats and
flows out to sea, it develops and drops icebergs as part of a natural
and cyclical process, Humbert said. But, the way the ice breaks, or
"calves," is still somewhat mysterious.
"Glaciers
are constantly in motion," she said. "They have their very
own flow dynamics. Their ice is exposed to permanent tensions and the
calving of icebergs is still largely unresearched."
The
Pine Island Glacier ice shelf, the part of the glacier that extends
out into the water, last produced large icebergs in 2001 and 2007.
The
glacier is the longest and fastest-changing on the West
Antarctic Ice Sheet.
While Humbert and her colleagues did not draw direct connections
between this week's calving event and climate change, other
scientists, including marine geologists at the British Antarctic
Survey, are investigating whether global warming is thinning
Antarctica's ice sheets and speeding up the glacier's retreat.
An
aerial shot of Antarctica's Pine Island Glacier. On Monday, a huge
piece of the glacier's ice shelf (the portion that floats on the
water) broke off to form a new iceberg.
"The
wind now brings warm sea water beneath the shelf ice," Humbert
said. "Over time, this process means that the shelf ice melts
from below, primarily at the so-called grounding line, the critical
transition to the land ice."
Still,
if the glacier's
flow speeds up,
it could have serious consequences, the researchers said. The Pine
Island Glacier currently acts as a plug, holding back part of the
immense West Antarctic Ice Sheet whose melting ice contributes to
rising sea levels.
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