West Antarctic ice cascades towards crisis
11
November, 2015:
Scientists
warn that continued ocean warming will lead to ice loss in the
Amundsen Sea region that could raise sea levels by three meters.
LONDON,
11 November, 2015 –
It wouldn’t take much to precipitate the complete collapse of
the West Antarctic ice sheet, according to new research.
Just
a few more decades of ocean warming would be enough
to destabilise the relatively small region of ice by
the Amundsen Sea − starting a cascade of slipping and sliding that
would tip enough ice into the ocean to raise sea levels by three
metres. The loss of ice would continue for centuries.
Two
scientists at the Potsdam
Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)
in Germany report
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that
they wanted to take a look at the long-term future of the mass of
south polar ice that has been worrying researchers for decades.
Planetary
temperatures
Scientists
have calculated that, were the world ever to burn all its fossil
fuels, thus increasing levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide and
stoking up planetary temperatures, that would be enough
to melt the entire Antarctic continent and
raise sea levels by 60 meters.
But
one of those studies focused on what is happening now; the second
looked thousands of years head.
The
two Potsdam scientists were interested in trying to model the
machinery of warmth, wind and weather that could actually complete
the long-feared collapse of the ice on and around the West Antarctic
peninsula. Right now, the Amundsen Sea ice shelf is precarious, and
the glaciers on land are thinning, retreating and accelerating.
“Sixty years of melting at the presently observed rate are enough to launch a process that is unstoppable and goes on for thousands of years”
“What
we call the eternal ice of Antarctica unfortunately turns out not to
be eternal at all,” says Earth systems analyst Johannes
Feldmann, one
of the report’s authors. “Once the ice masses get perturbed,
which is what is happening today, they respond in a non-linear way.
There is a sudden breakdown of stability after a long period during
which little change can be found.
“In
our simulations, 60 years of melting at the presently observed rate
are enough to launch a process that is unstoppable and goes on for
thousands of years. This is certainly a long process. But it’s
likely starting right now.”
And
his PIK colleague, Anders
Levermann,
professor of the dynamics of the climate system, says: “So
far, we lack sufficient evidence to say whether the Amundsen ice
destabilisation is due to greenhouse gases and the resulting global
warming. But it is clear that further greenhouse gas emission will
heighten the risk of an ice collapse in West Antarctica and more
unstoppable sea-level rise.”
Snow
accumulation
In
a separate study, scientists from the British
Antarctic Survey have
found that even though the West Antarctic ice sheet is thinning,
the snowfalls
have become heavier.
Elizabeth
Thomas,
a palaeoclimatologist, and her colleagues report
in Geophysical Research Letters that
a study of ice corings revealed that annual snow accumulation
increased 30% between 1900 and 2010.
In
the last 30 years, the ice sheet gained five metres more frozen water
than it did in the first 30 years.
The
authors think an increase in the number and intensity of storms in
the region could be responsible, and warn that such storms could
increase further with climate change.
The
same storms that brought more snow inland have also brought warmer
ocean currents to the ice shelf, which has then thinned rapidly, even
as the fresh loose snow has continued to pile onto the impacted ice
of previous decades.
“Thus
the increased snowfall we report here has not led to thickening of
the ice sheet, but is in fact another symptom of the changes that are
driving contemporary ice sheet loss,” said Dr Thomas. – Climate
News Network
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