SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Pastimes : The New Qualcomm - write what you like thread. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Maurice Winn who wrote (5929)3/9/2003 9:36:13 PM
From: Jon Koplik  Respond to of 12247
 
More Antarctica / melting glaciers / global warming (yes or no) -- stuff.

Study of Antarctic Points to Rising Sea Levels

March 7, 2003
By ANDREW C. REVKIN

New evidence from a rapidly warming part of Antarctica
suggests that ice can flow into the sea much more readily
than had been predicted, perhaps leading to an accelerated
rise in sea levels from global warming.

Many polar and ice experts said the new study, to be
published today in the journal Science, suggested that seas
might rise as much as several yards over the next several
centuries. They called that prospect a slow-motion
disaster, the cost of which - in lost shorelines, salt in
water supplies, and damaged ecosystems - would be borne by
many future generations.

The new analysis focuses on the recent breakup of one of
the floating ice shelves fringing the 1,000-mile Antarctic
Peninsula after decades of warming temperatures there. The
loss of the coastal shelves caused a "drastic" speedup of
the seaward flow of inland glaciers, the researchers say.

The peninsula, which stretches north toward South America,
has warmed an average of 4.5 degrees over the last 60
years, so much so that ponds of melted water now form in
the southern summer atop the flat ice shelves.

The warming there has not been linked definitely to a
global warming trend that scientists attribute in part to
emissions of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases
from human activities. Indeed, temperatures in most other
parts of Antarctica have remained stable or cooled, and
other ice shelves and glaciers show no signs of
deterioration.

[HUH ??? Weird ...]

But if the warming spreads to more of Antarctica, the
freeing of other glaciers could greatly accelerate the
amount of ice flowing into the ocean and contributing to
rising sea levels around the world.

In the new study, two Argentine researchers report on
aerial surveys they conducted in 2001 and 2002, which found
that the collapse of the sprawling Larsen A ice shelf in
1995 led to a sudden surge in the seaward flow of five of
the six glaciers - as if a doorstop had been removed or a
dam breached.

Geological evidence shows no signs of similar ice breakups
along the peninsula in many thousands of years, the
researchers and other experts said.

Indeed, the recent disintegration of ice shelves along both
coasts of the peninsula - with another one, Larsen C,
poised to go next - has come after thousands of years of
stability, said Pedro Skvarca, an author of the study and
the director of glaciology at the Antarctic Institute of
Argentina.

"We are witnessing a very significant warning sign of
climate warming," he said.

Other experts said the long-term risk of rising sea levels
was still unclear. But they added that the new study
underscored the importance of clarifying the relationship
between Antarctica's many fringing ice shelves and the
glaciers behind them.

The glaciers act like frozen rivers, transporting compacted
snow from the interior to the ocean. The balance between
added snow and departing ice can raise or lower the global
sea level by several yards.

For 30 years scientists have been debating whether the
glaciers are held back by the fringing ice, which resembles
the tattered brim of a sombrero, or by friction with the
land.

Now it is clear that at least some ice shelves act as a
brake, said the study's authors and other glacier and polar
experts who have seen the work.

The new study is the latest of several analyses in recent
years that illustrate how a slow warming can lead to abrupt
changes in the planet's frozen zones.

The other author was Hernán De Angelis, a geologist at the
Argentine institute. Both researchers contributed last year
to a study that provided the first indications of the
accelerating slide of these glaciers, but this analysis
provides new detail, they said, including images of
terraces of "stranded ice" stuck 60 to 100 feet up on
slopes that showed the glaciers' elevation just a few years
ago.

The sliding could be abetted not only by the loss of the
ice-shelf blockade, they said, but also by another
unpredicted result of warming noted by other scientists in
Antarctica and in Greenland: the rapid percolation of water
from summertime ponds high on the ice sheets down through
cracks to the base.

There the water acts as a lubricant, facilitating the slide
of glacial ice over the earth below.

For the moment, the breakdown of ice shelves has been
restricted to the Antarctic Peninsula.

Still, the continent has many other systems of ice shelves
and glaciers that appear to behave similarly to the one
that was the focus of the new study. The resemblance gives
the findings great significance, said Dr. Theodore A.
Scambos, a glacier expert at the National Snow and Ice Data
Center, a joint operation of the Commerce Department and
the University of Colorado.

The probability and timing of such an outcome remain
unknown, but the new work has shed some light on the
question, and it has increased some scientists' level of
urgency.

More evidence could come in the next year or so, if the
next ice shelf in line down the peninsula's coast, Larsen
C, falls apart, experts said.

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company.