A view of the Sjogren Glacier along the Larsen B ice shelf, which flows
down from the Antarctic Peninsula at an altitude of some 2,000 meters
above sea level to end in the Weddell Sea. File Photo
The surface melting of Antarctic ice shelves may double
by 2050 and surpass intensities associated with ice shelf collapse by
2100 if greenhouse gas emissions continue at the present rate, a new
study has warned.
Ice shelves are the floating extensions of the continent’s massive land-based ice sheets, researchers said.
While
the melting or breakup of floating ice shelves does not directly raise
sea level, ice shelves do have a “door stop” effect: They slow the flow
of ice from glaciers and ice sheets into the ocean, where it melts and
raises sea levels.
“Our results illustrate just how
rapidly melting in Antarctica can intensify in a warming climate,” said
Luke Trusel, lead author and postdoctoral scholar at Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) in US.
“This has
already occurred in places like the Antarctic Peninsula where we’ve
observed warming and abrupt ice shelf collapses in the last few
decades,” said Trusel.
“Our model projections show
that similar levels of melt may occur across coastal Antarctica near the
end of this century, raising concerns about future ice shelf
stability,” he said.
To study how melting evolves
over time and to predict future ice sheet melting along the entire
Antarctic coastline, the scientists combined satellite observations of
ice surface melting with climate model simulations under scenarios of
intermediate and high levels of greenhouse gas emissions until the year
2100.
The results indicate a strong potential for the
doubling of Antarctica-wide ice sheet surface melting by 2050, under
either emissions scenario.
However, between 2050 and 2100, the models show a significant divergence between the two scenarios.
Under
the high-emissions climate scenario, by 2100 ice sheet surface melting
approaches or exceeds intensities associated with ice shelf collapse in
the past.
Under the reduced-emissions scenario, there is relatively little increase in ice sheet melting after the doubling in 2050.
“The
data presented in this study clearly show that climate policy, and
therefore the trajectory of greenhouse gas emissions over the coming
century, have an enormous control over the future fate of surface
melting of Antarctic ice shelves, which we must consider when assessing
their long-term stability and potential indirect contributions to sea
level rise,” said Karen Frey, Clark University Associate Professor of
Geography.
The study was published in the journal Nature Geoscience.
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