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Information
24-Aug-2005
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Earth
Changes
and
Global
Warming
Home Page
Antarctic Warming Alarms
Scientists
HOBART, Australia, May 14, 2002
The Antarctic Peninsula ice shelves
are cracking up and, on the face of things, it is the most serious thaw
since the end of the last ice age 12,000 years ago.
The breakup of the ice shelves in itself is a natural process of renewal, but
the size and rate of production of icebergs — some the size of major cities — is
alarming scientists, who blame global warming.
The break-off last month of a 500-billion-ton chunk of the Larsen Ice
Shelf — 650 feet thick and with a surface area of 1,250 square miles — is the
second big break since a giant iceberg broke away in 1995 and is well beyond
normal activity, scientists say.
The production of vast volumes of icebergs is a threat to the world's climate
and the way the ocean's function, they say. And the process, once started,
cannot be reversed.
The fear is that a snowball effect will lead to disintegration of the vast West
Antarctic ice shelf, miles thick in parts.
"The (first) break-off said 'this is not theory, it's real — a rapid and
dramatic collapse of an ice shelf can happen,'" says Neal Young, glaciologist
with the Antarctic Cooperative Research Center in Hobart, Australia.
"This is saying 'that wasn't a one-off thing.'"
Significant warming in parts of the pristine Antarctic wilderness is expected to
continue to send huge icebergs into the Southern Ocean, and lead to the
disintegration of other sections of ice shelves that fringe Antarctica's
continental ice cover.
A longer-term effect would be if the disintegration led to a meltdown of the
grounded West Antarctic ice sheet, which would cause the world's oceans to rise
by up to 17 feet.
As they delve deeper into the mysteries of the southern continent, scientists
are finding a jigsaw on a gigantic scale.
The Antarctic Peninsula, which juts out into the Southern Ocean, has warmed by
2.5 degrees Celsius over the past 50 years, while some other areas have cooled.
Some parts of West Antarctica have been losing ice, while, like shifting grains
of sand on a beach, ice has built up elsewhere.
But the main message from the world's biggest concentration of Antarctic
scientists in Hobart, in Australia's southernmost city, is of retreating West
Antarctic ice and massive break-offs.
Scientists are not too worried for the moment about rising sea levels. This is
because floating ice shelves displace large amounts of sea water, and sea levels
would effectively remain unchanged if the ice shelves disappeared.
The real problems arise if the ice built up over millions of years on parts of
Antarctica's land mass melts.
"We aren't too worried about the first 100 years or so when the ice shelves go,
because there's no real effect on sea level and feedback on global climate is
really rather small," said Bill Budd, Professor of Meteorology at the CRC.
The CRC is a co-operative body between Australia's Antarctic Division, the
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization, the University of
Tasmania and other bodies.
But scientists believe the expected loss of half the Antarctic's sea ice
by the end of the century will have important consequences for Earth's entire
natural system.
They are finding that the world's deep ocean circulation system will slow
as the Antarctic produces smaller amounts of dense, oxygen-rich seawater,
possibly within 30 years, threatening marine life.
"We can't reverse it. Because the greenhouse gas levels are already up, we can't
bring them down, they just get higher, and the (ocean) cutoff will be stronger
at higher levels," Budd said.
The Antarctic is normally the source for a large part of the "bottom
water" which feeds oxygen to global ocean depths. And computer modeling results
indicate production of this dense, rich water has fallen by 20 percent from
pre-industrial times.
Two technology-crammed research ships, the 1,594-ton former Arctic trawler "The
Southern Surveyor" and its bigger cousin, the bright orange "Auora Australis,"
ride at anchor next to CSIRO Marine Research headquarters at Hobart harbor.
Both vessels are allowing scientists to probe the southern seas as never before,
as they deploy thousands of robotic floats and tons of sensitive equipment in
parts of the Antarctic.
Senior physical oceanographer Nathan Bindoff is conducting the first study of
ocean circulation under East Antarctica's Amery Ice Shelf.
"(Results show) the ice shelves are vulnerable to climate change," Bindoff said.
"An increase in temperature over the continental shelf (leads to) slightly
warmer water at the back of the ice shelves ... the melt rate goes up."
A small increase in ocean temperature from climate warming could produce a
doubling of the melt, which would cause the ice shelf to shrink dramatically,
recede and break off, he said.
Two years of physical research is proving model results, that the entire coastal
shape of the 340-mile-long, 124-mile-wide Amery Ice Shelf could soon change as
it melts back, he said.
A 1999 expedition to the Antarctic south of Tasmania, near Commonwealth Bay,
yielded even more alarming results.
An open coastal area near Dumont d'Urville in French territory has been found to
produce the most important source in East Antarctica of bottom water — "the
lungs of the ocean."
In the depths of winter, strong freezing winds cascade down the Arctic continent
to race across the ocean surface, pushing ice floes away, forming new sea in
open water near the coastline.
The oxygen-rich highly-saline seawater which remains sinks to the ocean floor to
form between 20 percent and 25 percent of Antarctica's total bottom water
production, which then circulates the globe, promoting ocean circulation and
life.
Bottom water is also sensitive to climate change, with no production near Dumont
d'Urville in some years, Bindoff said.
"These patterns are beyond natural variability," he said.
One question occupying Tom Trull, leader of Biogeochemical Cycles Program at the
CRC, is whether disappearance of half the Antarctic's sea ice by the end of the
century would also halve the Southern Ocean's krill, the tiny planktonic
crustaceans which are the planet's most abundant animal organism.
Krill, the keystone of the Antarctic ecosystem and bread and butter for seals,
penguins and whales, need ice for sanctuary and for food from algae.
Trull says CRC scientists predict a 15-percent drop in total global marine
phytoplankton production by the end of the century because of slowing ocean
circulation.
By then, melting of the grounded Antarctic ice sheet could be adding to
predicted sea level rises of 12-20 inches this century. And fears remain about
the long-term stability of the West Antarctic ice sheet because of rises in
ocean temperature.
"It is unlikely to collapse over the next 100 years, but projections on a longer
term are uncertain," said John Church, Polar Waters Program leader in the CRC.
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