The breakup of an Antarctic
ice shelf created runaway glaciers,
swiftly dumping large amounts of ice into the ocean, according
to a pair of new studies based on satellite data.
The process might be repeated
on a larger scale if the climate continues to get warmer, causing global sea
levels to rise significantly, scientists said.
The Larsen B ice shelf broke
free of the Antarctic Peninsula, a finger of the southernmost continent, in
2002. The collapse was attributed to a warming climate. Scientists have since
watched nearby glaciers, which are like giant, slow-moving ice rivers, flow
into the sea several times faster than before. They say the ice shelf, now gone,
served as a dam.
The speed has caused the
glaciers' thickness to drop by as much as 124 feet (38 meters) in one six-month
period.
Scientists think the 15-mile-wide
glaciers are thinning because the lower portions, near the sea, move more quickly,
stretching the upper regions "like saltwater taffy," said Ted Scambos of the
National Snow and Ice Data Center.
The studies, announced yesterday,
tracked the creation and movement of new crevasses generated by the stress.
Four glaciers previously
held back by the Larsen B shelf traveled no more than 500 yards (460 meters)
every year prior to the shelf's collapse, Scambos explained. Less than a year
after the collapse, they moved along at a clip of 2 miles (3.2 kilometers) per
year. That puts many more cubic miles of water into the ocean on an annual basis.
"Ice that was on the continent
itself rapidly flows into the ocean," Scambos said in a telephone interview.
"It's very abrupt," he said of the change in the once-glacial pace.
The research also monitored
two glaciers not related to the Larsen B shelf, and their speed has not changed
during the study period.
"This study shows very clearly
that glaciers which flow into ice shelves are partially controlled by the presence
of the shelf, which acts as a kind of braking system," Scambos said. "Removing
the shelf makes them speed up."
Because the glaciers are
losing ice to the sea "at a rate which exceeds snowfall, there is excess
water in the ocean from the glaciers, which means sea level is rising,"
said Eric Rignot, a researcher at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and leader
of the second study. Both research efforts, performed independently, reached
the same basic conclusions.
The amount of sea-level
change associated with the Larsen B glaciers is less than a millimeter a year.
But Rignot and Scambos say the process is a harbinger of what will happen when
much larger ice sheets warm up.
"The point is that
many other glaciers could do the same thing in the Peninsula, and eventually
in Antarctica, in which case it won't be small," Rignot told SPACE.com.
"What these studies are showing is that we should be concerned about that."
The research was funded
by NASA and is detailed in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.