Underlying ocean melts ice shelf, speeds up glacier movement
Warm ocean water, not warm air, is melting the Pine Island Glacier's floating ice shelf in Antarctica and may be the culprit for increased melting of other ice shelves, according to an international team of researchers. "We've been dumping heat into the atmosphere for years and the oceans have been doing their job, taking it out of the air and into the ocean," said Sridhar Anandakrishnan, professor of geosciences, Penn State. "Eventually, with all that atmospheric heat, the oceans will heat up."
The researchers looked at the remote Pine Island Glacier, a major outlet of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet because it has rapidly thinned and accelerated in the recent past.
"It has taken years and years to do the logistics because it is so remote from established permanent bases," said Anandakrishnan.
Pine Island Glacier or PIG lies far from McMurdo base, the usual location of American research in Antarctica. Work done in the southern hemisphere's summer, December through January 2012-13, included drilling holes in the ice to place a variety of instruments and using radar to map the underside of the ice shelf and the bottom of the ocean. Penn State researchers did the geophysics for the project and the research team's results are reported today (Sept. 13) in Science.
The ice shelf is melting more rapidly from below for a number of reasons. The oceans are warmer than they have been in the past and water can transfer more heat than air. More importantly, the terrain beneath the ice shelf is a series of channels. The floating ice in the channel has ample room beneath it for ocean water to flow in. The water melts some of the ice beneath and cools. If the water remained in the channel, the water would eventually cool to a point where it was not melting much ice, but the channels allow the water to flow out to the open ocean and warmer water to flow in, again melting the ice shelf from beneath.
"The way the ocean water is melting the ice shelf is a deeply non-uniform way," said Anandakrishnan. "That's going to be more effective in breaking these ice shelves apart."
The breaking apart of the ice shelf in the channels is similar to removing an ice jam from a river. The shelf was plugging the channel, but once it is gone, the glacier moves more rapidly toward the sea, forming more ice shelf, but removing large amounts of ice from the glacier.
The melting of floating ice shelves does not contribute to sea level rise because once they are in the water, the ice shelves have already contributed to sea level rise. However, most of the Antarctic glaciers are on land, and rapidly adding new ice shelf material to the floating mass will increase sea level rise.
"Antarctica is relatively stable, but that won't last forever, said Anandakrishnan. "This is a harbinger of what will happen."
The researchers believe that the interaction of the ocean beneath the ice shelf and melting of the ice shelf is an important variable that should be incorporated into the sea level rise models of global warming. Other recent research shows that without the channelized underbelly of the ice shelf and glacier, melting would be even more rapid.
"The Antarctic has been relatively quiet as a contributor to sea rise," said Anandakrishnan. "What this work shows is that we have been blind to a huge phenomenon, something that will be as big a player in sea level rise in the next century as any other contributor."
Source: Penn State
Other sources
- Pine Island Glacier Location Melting 2 Inches Per Day | Videofrom Live ScienceFri, 13 Sep 2013, 17:00:27 UTC
- Warm water under Antarctic glacier spurs astonishing rate of meltingfrom MSNBC: ScienceThu, 12 Sep 2013, 22:30:28 UTC
- Melting rate of Antarctic glaciers linked to global sea level risefrom UPIThu, 12 Sep 2013, 21:30:21 UTC
- Underlying ocean melts ice shelf, speeds up glacier movementfrom Science DailyThu, 12 Sep 2013, 19:00:49 UTC
- Antarctic Research Details Ice Melt Below Massive Glacierfrom Newswise - ScinewsThu, 12 Sep 2013, 19:00:22 UTC
- Warm Water Under Antarctic Glacier Spurs Rapid Meltingfrom Live ScienceThu, 12 Sep 2013, 18:30:36 UTC
- Antarctic research details ice melt below massive glacierfrom PhysorgThu, 12 Sep 2013, 18:30:34 UTC
- Swamplike waterways found under Antarctica glacierfrom MSNBC: ScienceWed, 11 Sep 2013, 21:31:24 UTC
- Mathematician uses skills to study Greenland's retreating glaciers (w/ Video)from PhysorgWed, 11 Sep 2013, 13:01:06 UTC
- VIDEO: Seals with sensors help study glacierfrom BBC News: Science & NatureMon, 9 Sep 2013, 15:30:55 UTC
- Mission to understand huge glacierfrom BBC News: Science & NatureMon, 9 Sep 2013, 12:00:53 UTC