NASA finds Antarctic ice shelf a few
years from disintegration
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[May 15, 2015]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The last intact
section of one of Antarctica's mammoth ice shelves is weakening fast and
will likely disintegrate completely in the next few years, contributing
further to rising sea levels, according to a NASA study released on
Thursday.
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The research focused on a remnant of the so-called Larsen B Ice
Shelf, which has existed for at least 10,000 years but partially
collapsed in 2002. What is left covers about 625 square miles (1,600
square km), about half the size of Rhode Island.
Antarctica has dozens of ice shelves - massive, glacier-fed floating
platforms of ice that hang over the sea at the edge of the
continent's coast line. The largest is roughly the size of France.
Larsen B is located in the Antarctic Peninsula, which extends toward
the southern tip of South America and is one of two principal areas
of the continent where scientists have documented the thinning of
such ice formations.
"This study of the Antarctic Peninsula glaciers provides insights
about how ice shelves farther south, which hold much more land ice,
will react to a warming climate," said Eric Rignot, co-author of the
study and a glaciologist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena, California.
Almost 200 countries have agreed to negotiate a United Nations pact
by the end of 2015 to combat global climate change, which most
scientists expect will bring about more flooding, droughts, heat
waves and higher seas.
The U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has cited a
probability of at least 95 percent that accelerated warming of the
planet has been triggered by human activities, led by atmospheric
emissions of greenhouse gases from the burning of fossil fuels.
The study, published online in the journal Earth and Planetary
Science Letters, was based on airborne surveys and radar data.
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The study's lead scientist, Ala Khazendar, said analysis of the data
reveals that a widening rift in Larsen B will eventually break it
apart completely, probably around the year 2020.
Once that happens, glaciers held in place by the ice shelf will slip
into the ocean at a faster rate and contribute to rising sea levels,
scientists say.
The study also found Leppard and Flask, two main tributary glaciers
of the ice shelf, have thinned by between 65 and 72 feet (20 to 22
meters) in recent years, and the pace of their shrinking has
accelerated since the immediate aftermath of the 2002 partial
collapse of the ice shelf.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Steve Gorman and Lisa
Shumaker)
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