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Showing posts with label ice shelves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ice shelves. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Less snow may cause the near term collapse of ice shelves in Antarctica

Sou | 1:02 AM Go to the first of 7 comments. Add a comment

There's a new paper out by scientists from Utrecht University and members of the British Antarctic Survey that looks at how the disappearance of the snow layer on top of ice shelves could be leading to their collapse. Here's an image from the paper to illustrate what happens:

Fig. 1. Conceptual illustration of firn air depletion and its consequences for ice-shelf hydrology and stability. (a) An ice shelf covered by a firn layer containing sufficient air. The inset shows meltwater being stored in the pore space of the firn. (b) An ice shelf with a depleted firn layer. Due to the absence of pore space, meltwater forms ponds that drain into fractures. Alternatively, water is routed to the fractures efficiently as shown in the leftmost fractures.
Source: Kuipers Munneke et al (2014)

From ScienceDaily.com

A number of floating ice shelves in Antarctica are at risk of disappearing entirely in the next 200 years, as global warming reduces their snow cover. Their collapse would enhance the discharge of ice into the oceans and increase the rate at which sea-level rises. A rapid reduction of greenhouse gas emissions could save a number of these ice shelves, researchers at Utrecht University and the British Antarctic Survey say in a new paper published today in the Journal of Glaciology.

Back in 1995 and 2002, two floating ice shelves in the north of the Antarctic Peninsula (Larsen A and B) suddenly collapsed -- each event occurred in a matter of weeks.

Dr Peter Kuipers Munneke, the paper's lead author, said: "This was a spectacular event, especially when you imagine the size of these ice shelves, which are several hundreds of metres thick, and have been in place for over 10,000 years."

The team of researchers suspected that the disappearance of the snow layer on top of the ice shelves could be an important precursor for shelf collapse. Their calculations confirm this hypothesis, and show that many more ice shelves could disappear in the next 200 years.

The scientists believed the snow layer plays an important role in regulating the effect of meltwater lakes on the ice shelves.

As long as the snow layer is sufficiently thick and cold, all meltwater can sink into the snow and refreeze. But in a warmer climate, the amount of meltwater increases, and the snow layers become thinner.

As a result, meltwater can no longer refreeze and forms large lakes on the surface of the ice shelves. The water drains through cracks and faults, causing them to widen until they become so wide and deep that the entire ice shelf disintegrates.

After their collapse, ice shelves can no longer provide resistance to the flow of the glaciers previously feeding them. As a result, the glacier flow accelerates significantly, contributing to an increase in sea-level rise.
The researchers performed calculations that show how this process may evolve over the next 200 years, using two different climate scenarios.

Dr Kuipers Munnekke said: "If we continue to burn fossil fuels at the current rate, almost all ice shelves in the Antarctic Peninsula will be under threat of collapse in the next 200 years. Only the two largest ones seem to be safe. Even in the much colder eastern part of Antarctica, some ice shelves could disintegrate. If we manage to keep global warming below the European Union target of 2oC, more than half of the ice shelves could be saved, compared to no action taken on emissions reductions."

The study received financial support from the European Union's four-year ice2sea project. Prof. David Vaughan said "We've been observing ice-shelf retreat around the Antarctic Peninsula since the early 1990s, but for the first time this model provides a strong basis for the prediction of future changes, which is a major step forward in understanding future sea-level changes."


Peter Kuipers Munneke, Stefan R.m. Ligtenberg, Michiel R. Van Den Broeke, David G. Vaughan. Firn air depletion as a precursor of Antarctic ice-shelf collapse. Journal of Glaciology, 2014; 60 (220): 205 DOI: 10.3189/2014JoG13J183

Friday, June 14, 2013

The Stupid it Burns so Hot it's Melting Antarctic Ice Shelves

Sou | 3:36 PM One comment so far. Add a comment

More Stupid from Anthony Watts of WUWT


Today Anthony Watts (who runs a blog called WUWT) wrote about a new paper by Rignot et al to be published in Science *, and crowed triumphantly - see, it's not CO2 that's melting the ice shelves around the Antarctic continent, it's warmer sea water.  He proclaimed it a game changer saying it made studies of surface temperature over the continent itself "even more irrelevant"!
Source: plognark

Huh?

Now why would Anthony confuse land surface temperature across the huge continent of Antarctica with sea temperature around the edge of the continent?  (Antarctica is a bit smaller than South America, larger than Europe and almost twice the size of Australia.)  Is he that stupid or is he intentionally misleading his readers?  It's an even bet with Anthony Watts.

Not only that, but why would he think that warmer oceans around Antarctica are not related to global warming?  Does he think oceans warm by magic? Or that global warming would not have an impact on ocean currents and atmospheric circulation?

Needless to say, Anthony is not only wrong about this being a "game changer", he is also wrong about Eric Steig's work.  The extent of the contribution of warmer waters at 55% is a new and important finding, but it's not as if melt from warm ocean waters as a concept is new.  As Dr Steig wrote back in April 2013 about past research focusing on the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (my bold):
For WAIS, the culprit for the rapid thinning of ice shelves is increased delivery of warm ocean water to the base of the ice shelves. This isn’t due to a warming ocean (though the deep water off the Antarctic coast line is indeed warming), but to changes in the winds that have forced more circumpolar deep water onto the continental shelf. Circumpolar deep water, at about +2°C, is very hot compared with the in situ melting point of glacier ice.
In a series of papers, we’ve shown that the warmer temperatures observed over the WAIS are the result of those same atmospheric circulation changes, which are not related to the SAM, but rather to the remote forcing from changes in the tropical Pacific: changes in the character of ENSO (Steig et al., 2012; Ding et al., 2011; 2012).)

This article is a bit long and has some nice photos and images, so to save those of you who might have limited bandwidth, I've put the rest of the article below the jump.