Antarctica: 60% of ice shelves at risk of
fracture, research suggests
Collapse of shelves would accelerate loss of Antarctic
ice sheet and increase sea-level rise
Patrick
Barkham
@patrick_barkham
Wed 26 Aug
2020 16.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/26/antarctica-ice-shelves-risk-fracture-collapse
Approximately
60% of Antarctica’s ice shelves could be vulnerable to fracture, accelerating
the loss of the Antarctic ice sheet and increasing sea-level rise, according to
a paper.
Antarctica’s
ice shelves, floating extensions of the ice sheet, help slow the flow of ice
into the ocean. But if these shelves fracture and then collapse, the flow of
melting glaciers into the oceans accelerates.
A study
published in the journal Nature has mapped areas where ice shelves hold back
upstream ice and are susceptible to “hydrofracture”, where meltwater flows into
crevasses and fissures in the ice and enlarges them, potentially triggering the
collapse of the ice shelf.
This
process could accelerate the loss of Antarctic ice more than some climatic
models predict as atmospheric warming increases. The study follows scientists’
recent announcement that Earth has lost 28tn tonnes of ice from its surface
since 1994.
Most
climatic models do not include the impact of hydrofracturing in their
calculations, although one 2016 paper did account for them in a simpler way
than the new study.
Hydrofracturing
can only occur if the surface of an ice shelf is inundated with meltwater.
Large pools of meltwater have existed in many areas of Antarctica for decades
without causing the collapse of an ice shelf because the flow of water into
surface fissures is slow or refreezes.
While some
areas are not susceptible to fracture, Ching-Yao Lai of the Earth Institute at
Columbia University and colleagues identified that 60% of the Antarctic ice
shelf was both slowing the flow of ice into the ocean and also vulnerable to
fracture.
While
fractures in the ice are visible in satellite imagery, manual mapping is
impractical because of the extent of the ice. So Lai and colleagues used
machine learning to identify fracture-like features in satellite pictures of
Antarctica, before modelling which fractures were vulnerable to
hydrofracturing.
They
developed a model to predict where fractures could form and found close
agreement with the fractures mapped by their machine learning algorithm.
Lai said:
“We predicted that the ice-shelves areas that can collapse due to hydrofracture
are mostly the crucial part of ice shelves that hold back the upstream flow of
ice sheets. Thus the loss of these ice-shelf areas due to hydrofracture can
substantially affect the flow of ice sheets into the ocean.
“But
predicting how much and how fast the loss of Antarctic ice and sea-level rise
will occur due to the hydrofracturing process will require coupling our new
fracture model with an ice-sheet and climate model, which is an important next
step.”
The
researchers hope their fracture model can help create more accurate models of
the fate of the ice sheets, which together with climatic modelling will produce
more accurate predictions of sea-level rise, which scientists believe could
exceed one metre by the century’s end.
The
researchers warned that while many areas of Antarctic meltwater were not
currently likely to cause the hydrofracture of the ice beneath, with global heating
these areas could become newly at risk in the future.
“Increased
meltwater ponding in resilient locations will not lead to widespread
hydrofracturing according to our analysis,” the authors wrote. “However,
predictions of future melt suggest that melt rates seen in locations that
experience meltwater ponding today could become widespread by 2100 under
high-emissions scenarios.”
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