NASA
worried by unusually big iceberg six times the size of Manhattan
Dubbed
“B31,” the iceberg could pose some significant problems for ships
if it continues to melt or break apart in the Southern Ocean.
25
April, 2014
At
255 square miles (660 sq. km) and 500 meters thick, B31 is one of the
biggest icebergs on the planet – and currently six times the size
of Manhattan.
Although
the process of icebergs breaking off from glaciers is typical –
“iceberg calving,” as its known, typically occurs at the Pine
Island Glacier every six to 10 years – NASA’s Earth Observatory
is attempting to keep a special eye on B31.
“Iceberg
calving is a very normal process,” NASA
glaciologist Kelly Brunt said on the agency’s website.“However,
the detachment rift, or crack, that created this iceberg was well
upstream of the 30-year average calving front of Pine Island Glacier
(PIG), so this a region that warrants monitoring.”
Image from earthobservatory.nasa.gov
"It's
floating off into the sea and will get caught up in the current and
flow around the Antarctica continent where there are ships," she
said, according to the Guardian.
NASA
has been monitoring the Pine Island Glacier since 2011, when it first
observed a crack that eventually got larger and resulted in B31
breaking off into the ocean. The massive glacier has been highlighted
by scientists over the last 20 years due to the fact that, as NASA
put it, “it
has been thinning and draining rapidly and may be one of the largest
contributors to sea level rise.”
As
noted by the Guardian, Kelly said this iceberg alone wouldn’t
contribute significantly to rising ocean levels even if it melted
completely. However, should the Pine Island Glacier continue
shrinking in size, it could raise global sea levels by 1.5 meters.
Despite
the increased interest by NASA, the agency said keeping track of
B31’s movement over the next six months will be difficult, since
winter is descending on the region and it will be blanketed in
darkness.
Image from earthobservatory.nasa.gov
“We are doing some research on local ocean currents to try to explain the motion properly. It has been surprising how there have been periods of almost no motion, interspersed with rapid flow,” University of Sheffield researcher Grant Bigg told the Earth Observatory.
“The
iceberg is now well out of Pine Island Bay and will soon join the
more general flow in the Southern Ocean, which could be east or west
in this region.”
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