This
Antarctic Ice Shelf Will Be the Next to Collapse
Antarctica's
crumbling Larsen B Ice Shelf is poised to finally finish its
collapse, a researcher said Tuesday (Dec. 10) here at the annual
meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
12
December, 2013
The
Scar Inlet Ice Shelf will likely fall apart during the next warm
summer, said Ted Scambos, a glaciologist at the National Snow and Ice
Data Center in Boulder, Colo. Scar Inlet's ice is the largest remnant
of the vast Larsen B shelf still attached to the Antarctic
Peninsula. (Another small fragment, the Seal Nunataks, clings on
as well.) In the Southern Hemisphere's summer of 2002, about 1,250
square miles (3,250 square kilometers) of the enormous Larsen B Ice
Shelf splintered into hundreds of icebergs. Scar Inlet is about
two-thirds the size of the ice lost from Larsen B.
The
Larsen B ice shelf on January 31, 2002. Melt ponds dot its surface.
Scroll down for an after picture.
Credit:
NASA.
Scambos
and his colleagues at the NSIDC and in Argentina are tracking
glaciers flowing into Scar Inlet so they can watch in detail how
these ice rivers respond when their dams disintegrate. Many Antarctic
glaciers have surged toward the sea after ice shelves collapsed,
and leading scientists suggest that the shelves, the "tongues"
of the glaciers that float on the ocean, act like dams. But Larsen
B's disappearing act left little Scar Inlet holding back two big
glaciers, and they seem to be tearing the ice shelf apart, Scambos
said. Fractures and crevasses now incise the ice shelf. [Album:
Stunning Photos of Antarctic Ice]
"It's becoming more and more like a floating independent island of ice than a plate bound to the coastline," Scambos said.
The
location of the Larsen Ice Shelf, on the West Antarctic Peninsula
Credit:
USGS.
Scambos
predicts that a warm summer — which causes widespread surface
melting atop the ice shelf — will doom Scar Inlet. But the shelf's
ice is so thin and fractured that it might collapse on its own, even
without melting, Scambos said.
"It's
possible that if there's a summer warm enough to clear out the sea
ice, it will simply fall apart," he said.
But
Antarctica hasn't had a very warm summer since 2006, so for now, the
scientists wait and watch.
"When
it breaks apart, we're really going to learn a lot more about what
happens during this process," said Scambos, who will be visiting
that area of Antarctica in January (summer in the Southern
Hemisphere).
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