Epic Antarctic Ice-Shelf Collapse Caused by Chain Reaction
The
mysterious disintegration of a giant Antarctic ice shelf that had
been stable for millennia was caused by a chain reaction of lakes
draining on top of the ice, researchers say.
14
January, 2014
This
finding suggests that other ice shelves could be vulnerable to such
abrupt collapses, the researchers said.
Scientists
investigated the spectacular 2002
breakup of Antarctica's Larsen B Ice Shelf, a vast plate of ice
larger than Rhode Island that once covered more than 1,160 square
miles (3,000 square kilometers). The ice shelf (the tongue of a
glacier that floats on the ocean) had been stable for thousands of
years but crumbled into thousands of icebergs over the course of just
a few days.
Before
the ice shelf fell apart, more than 2,750 lakes existed on top of it.
These "supraglacial lakes" formed as ice and snow gradually
melted over the preceding years. [Album:
Stunning Photos of Antarctic Ice]
"The
lakes tend to pool in place, rather than running off the ice shelf
into the ocean, as the ice shelf is very flat," said study lead
author Alison Banwell, a glaciologistat the University of Chicago.
The
researchers noted that in the days right before the ice shelf
collapsed, the majority of these lakes drained. However, scientists
didn't know why.
By
March 5, the floating ice plain had crumbled and was beginning to
float away.
Credit:
NASA.
Two
mysteries with one simulation
Now,
computer simulations have solved two mysteries at once — what made
the lakes disappear, and how the ice shelf broke up so quickly.
The
model analyzed the stresses the supraglacial lakes created on the ice
shelf. The scientists discovered that the draining of just one of
these lakes down into the ice could trigger the formation of cracks
in the ice under neighboring lakes. These cracks could, in turn, lead
numerous lakes to empty, causing fractures to arise under more lakes
— a chain reaction.
"Although
previous studies have suggested that the widespread breakup of the
Larsen B Ice Shelf was probably due to the drainage of almost 3,000
surface lakes, no previous study has explained how and why these
lakes would have drained within just a few days in order to cause
such a rapid and explosive breakup event," Banwell said. "Our
suggestion that the drainage of one single 'starter' lake can produce
multiple fractures that are able to drain hundreds of surrounding
lakes through a chain-reaction process is, therefore, of crucial
importance. We argue that it was this chain-reaction process which
contributed to the abruptness of the explosive disintegration of the
Larsen B Ice Shelf."
More
breakups on the way?
If
current warming trends prevail, "lake-induced breakup may
threaten other Antarctic
ice shelves and cause them to disintegrate in a similarly dramatic
way," Banwell told LiveScience.
It's
important for scientists to determine the risk of Antarctic ice-shelf
collapses because these vast blocks of ice essentially serve as dams
for the glaciers flowing into them. The removal of these buttresses
causes glaciers to feed more ice to the ocean, "which ultimately
causes sea levels to rise," Banwell said. "The next to go
is likely to be the Scar Inlet, followed by the Ross and
Ronne-Filchner ice shelves." (At a recent scientific meeting,
Ted Scambos, a glaciologist with the National Snow and Ice Data
Center in Boulder, Colo., predicted
that the Scar Inlet Ice Shelf, which is a remnant of the Larsen B
Ice Shelf, would be the next to go.)
The
ultimate proof of this idea "may only come when the next ice
shelf collapses," Banwell concluded.
Banwell
and her colleagues Douglas MacAyeal and Olga Sergienko detailed their
findings in the Nov. 28 issue of the journal Geophysical Research
Letters.
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