‘Unimaginable amounts’ of water will flow into oceans if that temperature rise occurs and ice buffers vanish, warn UK scientists
A rift in the Larsen C ice shelf, Antarctica, revealed by
British Antarctic Survey observations from February 2017. Photograph: British Antarctic Survey/AFP/Getty |
Researchers from the University of Reading said that limiting the temperature rise to 2C could halve the area at risk and avoid a drastic rise in sea levels.
The findings, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, suggest that 4C warming could leave 34% of the area of all the Antarctic ice shelves – amounting to about half a million square kilometres – at the risk of collapse.
Ice shelves are permanent floating sheets of ice that connect to a landmass; most surround the coasts of Antarctica.
Ella Gilbert, a research scientist in the University of Reading’s meteorology department, said: “Ice shelves are important buffers, preventing glaciers on land from flowing freely into the ocean and contributing to sea level rise.
"When they collapse it’s like a giant cork being removed from a bottle, allowing unimaginable amounts of water from glaciers to pour into the sea.
“We know that, when melted ice accumulates on the surface of ice shelves, it can make them fracture and collapse spectacularly.
“Previous research has given us the bigger picture in terms of predicting Antarctic ice shelf decline. But our new study uses the latest modelling techniques to fill in the finer detail and provide more precise projections.”
Gilbert said the team’s work highlighted the importance of limiting the global temperature increases as set out in the Paris climate agreement, which promotes a global framework to avoid dangerous climate change by limiting global warming to less than 2C above pre-industrial levels.
As part of their modelling study, the researchers also identified Larsen C, the largest remaining ice shelf on the peninsula, as being particularly at risk in a warmer climate.
They said other ice shelves facing this threat included Shackleton, Pine Island, and Wilkins.
Gilbert said: “If temperatures continue to rise at current rates we may lose more Antarctic ice shelves in the coming decades. Limiting warming will not just be good for Antarctica – preserving ice shelves means less global sea level rise, and that’s good for us all.”
Links
- Antarctic Glacier Will Reach Tipping Point
- A Huge Iceberg That's Bigger Than New York City Broke Off Near A UK Base In Antarctica
- Why Scientists Are So Worried About Antarctica's Doomsday Glacier
- Melting Antarctic Ice Will Raise Sea Level By 2.5 Metres – Even If Paris Climate Goals Are Met, Study Finds
- The Tipping Points At The Heart Of The Climate Crisis
- Antarctica’s ‘Doomsday Glacier’ Is Starting To Crack
- Polar ice caps melting six times faster than in 1990s
- Tackling degraded oceans could mitigate climate crisis - report
- Last time CO2 levels were this high, there were trees at the South Pole
- East Antarctica glacial stronghold melting as seas warm
- Global warming is melting Antarctic ice from below
- Global warming doubles growth rates of Antarctic seabed's marine fauna – study
- Iceberg twice size of Luxembourg breaks off Antarctic ice shelf
- Antarctic peninsula temperatures have fallen, study shows
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