Perilous Times and Global
Warming
The Big Melt: Antarctic glaciers surge to ocean
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By Martin Redfern
Rothera Research Station, Antarctica
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The UK work is discovering just how fast
the ice is moving
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UK scientists working in Antarctica have found some of the clearest
evidence yet of instabilities in the ice of part of West Antarctica.
If the trend continues, they say, it could
lead to a significant rise in global sea level.
The new evidence comes from a group of
glaciers covering
an area the size of Texas, in a remote and seldom visited part of West
Antarctica.
The "rivers of ice" have
surged sharply in speed towards the ocean.
David Vaughan, of the British Antarctic
Survey,
explained: "It has been called the weak underbelly of the West
Antarctic Ice Sheet, and the reason for that is that this is the area
where the bed beneath the ice sheet dips down steepest towards the
interior.
"If there is a feedback mechanism to make
the ice sheet unstable, it will be most unstable in this region."
There is good reason to be concerned.
Satellite measurements have shown that
three huge glaciers here have been speeding up for more than a decade.
The biggest of the glaciers, the Pine
Island Glacier, is causing the most concern.
Inhospitable conditions
Julian Scott has just returned from there.
He told the
BBC: "This is a very important glacier; it's putting more ice into the
sea than any other glacier in Antarctica.
"It's a couple of kilometres thick, its
30km wide and
it's moving at 3.5km per year, so it's putting a lot of ice into the
ocean."
The team drove its skidoos for thousands of
km across the ice
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It is a very remote and inhospitable region. It
was
visited briefly in 1961 by American scientists but no one had returned
until this season when Julian Scott and Rob Bingham and colleagues from
the British Antarctic survey spent 97 days camping on the flat, white
ice.
At times, the temperature got down to minus
30C and strong winds made work impossible.
At one point, the scientists were confined
to their tent continuously for eight days.
"The wind really makes the way you feel
incredibly
colder, so just motivating yourself to go out in the wind is a really
big deal," Rob Bingham told BBC News.
When the weather improved, the researchers
spent most of their time driving skidoos across the flat, featureless
ice.
"We drove skidoos over it for something
like 2,500km each and we didn't see a single piece of topography."
Long drag
Rob Bingham was towing a radar on a
100m-long line and
detecting reflections from within the ice using a receiver another 100m
behind that.
The signals are revealing ancient flow
lines in the ice. The hope is to reconstruct how it moved in the past.
Julian Scott was performing seismic
studies, using
pressurised hot water to drill holes 20m or so into the ice and place
explosive charges in them. He used arrays of geophones strung out
across the ice to detect reflections, looking, among other things, for
signs of soft sediments beneath the ice that might be lubricating its
flow.
The Pig - Pine Island Glacier - is a major
draining feature on the Wais
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He also placed recorders linked to the global
positioning system (GPS) satellites on the ice to track the glacier's
motion, recording its position every 10 seconds.
Throughout the 1990s, according to
satellite
measurements, the glacier was accelerating by around 1% a year. Julian
Scott's sensational finding this season is that it now seems to have
accelerated by 7% in a single season, sending more and more ice into
the ocean.
"The measurements from last season seem to
show an
incredible acceleration, a rate of up to 7%. That is far greater than
the accelerations they were getting excited about in the 1990s."
The reason does not seem to be warming in
the surrounding air.
One possible culprit could be a deep ocean
current that
is channelled onto the continental shelf close to the mouth of the
glacier. There is not much sea ice to protect it from the warm water,
which seems to be undercutting the ice and lubricating its flow.
Ongoing monitoring
Julian Scott, however, thinks there may be
other forces at work as well.
Much higher up the course of the glacier
there is
evidence of a volcano that erupted through the ice about 2,000 years
ago and the whole region could be volcanically active, releasing
geothermal heat to melt the base of the ice and help its slide towards
the sea.
Geothermal activity may be playing its
part, says Julian Scott
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David Vaughan believes that the risk of a major
collapse
of this section of the West Antarctic ice sheet should be taken
seriously.
"There has been the expectation that this
could be a vulnerable area," he said.
"Now we have the data to show that this is
the area that
is changing. So the two things coinciding are actually quite worrying."
The big question now is whether what has
been recorded
is an exceptional surge or whether it heralds a major collapse of the
ice. Julian Scott hopes to find out.
"It is extraordinary and we've left a GPS
there over winter to see if it is going to continue this trend."
If the glacier does continue to surge and
discharge most
of it ice into the sea, say the researchers, the Pine Island Glacier
alone could raise global sea level by 25cm.
That might take decades, but neighbouring
glaciers are accelerating too and if the entire region were to lose its
ice, the sea would rise by 1.5m worldwide.
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