I
see, on hindsite that at least SOMEBODY in the NZ media did do some
coverage of the biggest story for this part of the world for some
time (and it trumps spy stories even), even though it eluded me.
Climate
change, even more than in Australia, is well-and-truly being swept
under the carpet – even the sanitised IPCC version.
West
Antarctic glaciers melting - NASA
13
May, 2014
NASA
has warned that part of the Antarctic ice-sheet appears to be in what
it calls irreversible decline with serious consequences for the
world's sea levels.
Researchers
analysed 40 years of observations of six big ice streams draining
into the Amundsen Bay and concluded that nothing can stop them
melting away.
Although
these are abrupt changes - in terms of geological time - the
timescales involved are likely measured in centuries.
(No, it is not. This is not a linear process but an EXPONENTIAL one - SMR)
The BBC reported Amundsen Bay had some of the biggest and fastest moving glaciers on Earth.
Scientists
said sea levels could rise 3m to 5m over hundreds of years as a
result.
The
lead author Eric Rignot said countries - and especially coastal
communities - needed to act.
The
new study has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Research
Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union, but Nasa held a
teleconference on Monday to brief reporters on the findings.
Prof
Rignot said warm ocean water was relentlessly eating away at the
glaciers' fronts and that the geometry of the sea bed in the area
meant that this erosion had now entered a runaway process.
"We
present observational evidence that a large section of the West
Antarctic Ice Sheet has gone into a state of irreversible retreat; it
has passed the point of no return," the agency glaciologist
explained.
"This
retreat will have major consequences for sea level rise worldwide. It
will raise sea levels by 1.2m .... but its retreat will also
influence adjacent sectors of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet which
could triple this contribution to sea level."
The
Amundsen Bay sector includes some of the biggest and fastest moving
glaciers on Earth.
Like
the Thwaites, Smith, Haynes, Pope, Smith and Kohler Glaciers in this
region - the PIG has been thinning rapidly.
And
its grounding line - the zone where the glacier enters the sea and
lifts up and floats - has also reversed tens of km over recent
decades.
What
makes the group vulnerable is that their bulk actually sits below
current sea level with the rock bed sloping inland towards the
continent.
This
is a geometry, say scientists, that invites further melting and
further retreat.
The
new study includes radar observations that map the underlying rock in
the region, and this finds no ridge or significant elevation in
topography that could act as a barrier to the glaciers' reverse.
"In
our new study, we present additional data that the junction of the
glaciers with the ocean - the grounding line - has been retreating at
record speeds unmatched anywhere in the Antarctic," said Prof
Rignot.
"We
also present new evidence that there is no large hill at the back of
these glaciers that could create a barrier and hold the retreat back.
This is why we conclude that the disappearance of ice in this sector
is unstoppable."
The
researcher, who is also affiliated to the University of California,
Irvine, attributed the underlying driver of these changes to global
warming.
This,
together with atmospheric behaviours influenced by a loss of ozone in
the stratosphere, had created stronger winds in the Southern Ocean
that were now drawing more warm water towards and under the glaciers.
Dr
Tom Wagner, the cryosphere program scientist with Nasa, said it was
clear that, in the case of these six glaciers, a threshold had been
crossed.
"The
results are not based on computer simulations or numerical models;
they are based on the interpretation of observations," he told
reporters.
"And
I think this is an important point because this sometimes can get
lost on the general public when they're trying to understand climate
change and the implications."
Professor Rignot and colleagues put no real timescales on events, but a paper released by the journal Science to coincide with the Nasa media conference tries to do just this.
It
does include computer modelling and was led by Dr Ian Joughin, a
glaciologist at the University of Washington's Applied Physics
Laboratory. The study considers the particular case of Thwaites
Glacier.
In
the model, Dr Joughin's team is able to reproduce very accurately the
behaviour of the glacier over the past 20 years.
The
group then runs the model forwards to try to forecast future trends.
This,
likewise, indicates that a collapse of the glacier is inevitable, and
suggests it will most likely occur in the next 200 to 500 years.
Professor
Andy Shepherd, from Leeds University, UK, is connected with neither
Rignot's nor Joughin's work.
He
told the BBC: "[Joughin's] new simulations are a game changing
result, as they shine a spotlight on Thwaites Glacier, which has
until now played second fiddle to its neighbour Pine Island Glacier
in terms of ice losses.
"There
is now little doubt that this sector of West Antarctica is in a state
of rapid retreat, and the burning question is whether and how soon
this retreat might escalate into irreversible collapse. Thankfully,
we now have an array of satellites capable of detecting the tell-tale
signs, and their observations will allow us to monitor the progress
and establish which particular scenario Thwaites Glacier will
follow."
Prof
Shepherd said the EU's newly launched Sentinel-1a radar satellite
would have a unique capability to assess the glaciers' grounding
lines.
"As
soon as the satellite reaches its nominal orbit, we will turn its eye
on Thwaites Glacier to see whether it has indeed changed as
predicted."
Hear
Professor Eric Rignot here ( 3 min 29 sec )
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.