Underwater melting of Antarctic ice far greater than thought, study finds
The base of the ice around the south pole shrank by 1,463 square kilometres between 2010 and 2016
2
April, 2018
Hidden
underwater melt-off in the Antarctic is doubling every 20 years and
could soon overtake Greenland to become the biggest source of
sea-level rise, according to the first complete underwater map of the
world’s largest body of ice.
Warming
waters have caused the base of ice near the ocean floor around the
south pole to shrink by 1,463 square kilometres – an area the size
of Greater London – between 2010 and 2016, according to the
new study published in Nature Geoscience.
The
research by the UK
Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling at
the University of Leeds suggests climate change is affecting the
Antarctic more than previously believed and is likely to prompt
global projections of sea-level rise to be revised upward.
Until
recently, the Antarctic was seen as relatively stable. Viewed from
above, the extent of land and sea ice in the far south has not
changed as dramatically as in the far north.
But
the new study found even a small increase in temperature has been
enough to cause a loss of five metres every year from the bottom edge
of the ice sheet, some of which is more than 2km underwater.
“What’s
happening is that Antarctica is being melted away at its base. We
can’t see it, because it’s happening below the sea surface,”
said Professor Andrew Shepherd, one of the authors of the paper. “The
changes mean that very soon the sea-level contribution
from Antarctica could
outstrip that from Greenland.”
The
study measures the Antarctic’s “grounding line” – the
bottommost edge of the ice sheet across 16,000km of coastline. This
is done by using elevation data from the European Space Agency’s
CryoSat-2 and applying Archimedes’s
principle of buoyancy,
which relates the thickness of floating ice to the height of its
surface.
The
greatest declines were seen in west Antarctica. At eight of the ice
sheet’s 65 biggest glaciers, the speed of retreat was more than
five times the rate of deglaciation since the last ice age. Even in
east Antarctica, where some scientists – and many climate deniers –
had previously believed ice might be increasing based on surface
area, glaciers were at best stable and at worst in retreat when
underwater ice was taken into account.
“It
should give people more cause for concern,” said Shepherd. “Now
that we have mapped the whole edge of the ice sheet, it rules out any
chance that parts of Antarctica are advancing. We see retreat in more
places and stasis elsewhere. The net effect is that the ice sheet
overall is retreating. People can’t say ‘you’ve left a stone
unturned’. We’ve looked everywhere now.”
The
results could prompt an upward revision of sea-level rise
projections. 10 years ago, the main driver was Greenland. More
recently, the Antarctic’s estimated contribution has been raised by
the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. But its forecasts were
based on measurements from the two main west Antarctic glaciers –
Thwaites and Pine Island – a sample that provides an overly narrow
and conservative view of what is happening when compared with the new
research.
The
study’s lead author, Hannes Konrad, said there was now clear
evidence that the underwater glacial retreat is happening across the
ice sheet.
“This
retreat has had a huge impact on inland glaciers,” he said,
“because releasing them from the sea bed removes friction, causing
them to speed up and contribute to global sea level rise.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.