Big chunk of Antarctic ice shelf falling apart

The Indian Express , Thursday, March 27, 2008
Correspondent : Staff Reporter
New York, March 26 : A huge chunk of ice measuring 13,680 square kilometres or about seven times the size of Manhattan island has begun to collapse because of climate change in the fast-warming region of Antarctica.

The scientists at the US National Snow and Ice Data Center (NSIDC) at the University of Colorado, USA, have based their calculation on the satellite imagery received by it.

The Wilkins Ice Shelf is a broad plate of permanent floating ice on the southwest Antarctic Peninsula, about 1,600 kilometers south of South America.

In the past 50 years, the western Antarctic Peninsula has experienced the biggest temperature increase on Earth, rising by 0.5 degree Celsius per decade.

NSIDC Lead Scientist Ted Scambos, who first spotted the disintegration in March, said, “We believe the Wilkins has been in place for at least a few hundred years. But warm air and exposure to ocean waves are causing a break-up.”

Satellite images, scientists say, indicate that the Wilkins began its collapse on February 28 and a large iceberg, 41 by 2.5 kilometers, fell away from the ice shelf’s southwestern front, triggering a runaway disintegration of 405 square kilometers of the shelf interior.

The edge of the shelf crumbled into the sky-blue pattern of exposed deep glacial ice that has become characteristic of climate-induced ice shelf break-ups such as the Larsen B in 2002. A narrow beam of intact ice, just 6 kilometers wide was protecting the remaining shelf from further breakup as of March 23, they said.

Scientists track ice shelves and study collapses carefully because some of them hold back glaciers, which if unleashed, can accelerate and raise sea level.

 
SOURCE : The Indian Express, Thursday, 27 March 2008
 


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