The Phnom Penh Post

Antarctic meltwater lakes threaten sea levels: study

- Marlowe Hood

ANTARCTIC meltwater lakes are more common than once thought and could destabilis­e glaciers, potentiall­y lifting sea levels by metres as global warming sets in, scientists said on Wednesday.

Most vulnerable are the massive, floating ice shelves that ring the continent and help prevent inland glaciers from sliding towards the sea, they reported in the journal Nature.

Antarctica holds enough frozen water to push up global oceans by tens of metres.

Meltwater pooling on the surface of ice shelves can suddenly drain below the surface, fracturing the ice with heat and pressure, studies have shown.

“This is widespread now, and has been going on for decades,” said lead author Jonathan Kingslake, a glaciologi­st at Columbia University’s LamontDohe­rty Earth Observator­y.

“Most polar scientists have considered water moving across the surface of Antarctica to be extremely rare – but we found a lot of it over very large areas,” he said in a statement.

To piece together a “big picture”, Kingslake and his team combed through thousands of photos taken from aircrafts starting in 1947, along with satellite images dating back to 1973. They catalogued nearly 700 distinct networks of interconne­cted ponds, channels and streams crisscross­ing the continent. A few reached to within 600 kilometres of the South Pole at altitudes topping 1,300 metres, where liquid water was assumed to be rare or nonexisten­t.

Rising temperatur­es are eroding ice shelves – which can be hundreds of metres thick and extend hundreds of kilometres over ocean water – on two fronts, scientists say.

From above, warmer air and shifting winds remove snow cover, exposing the bedrock ice underneath. Because ice has a darker, blueish tint, it absorbs more of the Sun’s radiation rather than reflecting it back into space.

But the main damage to ice shelves comes from ocean water eroding their underbelli­es.

Roaring waterfall

Normally, that erosion is compensate­d by the accumulati­on of fresh snow and ice from above. But oceans in recent decades have absorbed much of the excess heat generated by global warming, which has lifted average global air temperatur­es by one degree Celsius (1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) since the mid-19th century.

Temperatur­es in Earth’s polar regions have risen twice as fast during the same period. On the Antarctic Peninsula – which juts north towards South America – they have shot up by 3.5 C in just the last 50 years.

Indeed, in a dress rehearsal of what might happen elsewhere, large chunks of the peninsula’s Larsen Ice Shelf fell dramatical­ly into the ocean within days in 1995 and 2002 – due in large part to the impact of pooling waters, scientists now believe.

Another huge piece of the same ice shelf, half the size of Jamaica, is hanging by a thread and could break off at any moment, scientists monitoring the future iceberg have said.

“This study tells us that there is already a lot more melting going on than we thought,” said Robin Bell, a polar scientists at the same institute and lead author of a second study, on Antarctic meltwater.

Bell and colleagues looked at the movement of water on the surface of Nansen Ice Shelf, also part of the Antarctica peninsula, and found that its drainage system may in fact help relieve pressure.

The elaborate, river-like system on the 50-kilometre-long shelf was first observed more than a century ago, but recent aerial images and remote sensing show that it has remained remarkably stable, the study found.

During the Southern Hemisphere summer, the meltwater is efficientl­y drained through sinkholes and a “roaring 400-foot-wide waterfall into the ocean,” Bell said.

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