Oman Daily Observer

Giant iceberg set to snap off

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An expanse of ice roughly the size of Delaware is close to breaking off from the warming Antarctic ice shelf to form one of the world’s largest-ever icebergs, scientists said on Thursday. Satellite data showed that the West Antarctic Larsen C shelf is poised to shed an ice block measuring about 5,000 square kilometres. “The rift in Larsen C is likely to lead to one of the largest icebergs ever recorded,” said Swansea University in Wales, whose scientists are monitoring the creeping crack. The rift, which is threatenin­g to carve off a finger-shaped iceberg about 350 metres thick, expanded by 17 kilometres in six days, leaving just a 13 kilometre thread attaching it to the main ice sheet. An ice shelf is a floating extension of a land-covering ice sheet. Larsen C is the most northerly of the Antarctic ice shelves, as well as the largest.

The calving of the iceberg would see it lose about a tenth of its total area, shrinking it to its smallest size on record. On its own, the huge ice cube would not add to sea level rise. But its detachment may render the remainder of the Larsen C shelf unstable and vulnerable to collapse, which would release vast amounts of water, scientists say.

If all the glaciers held back by Larsen C were to run into the ocean, the global water mark would increase by about 10 centimetre­s, the researcher­s said. The West Antarctic ice sheet holds enough frozen water to raise the average sea level by about six metres. Two smaller shelves on the eastern side of the Antarctic peninsula have already collapsed.

The first, Larsen A, was lost in 1995. Seven years later, the Larsen B shelf followed — at 3,250 square kilometres, it was the size of Rhode Island.

The Larsen B event had no precedent since the end of the last Ice Age some 12,000 years ago, according to glaciologi­sts.

“It is widely accepted that warming ocean and atmospheri­c temperatur­es have been a factor in earlier disintegra­tions of ice shelves elsewhere on the Antarctic Peninsula,” the Swansea team said.

Antarctica is one of the fastest warming places on the planet, they added, “a feature which will certainly not have hindered the developmen­t of the rift.”

Ice shelves break up naturally, but global warming is thought to have accelerate­d the process, though this has not been scientific­ally proven.

Scores of countries committed to the 2015 Paris Agreement, which calls for efforts to cap global warming at “well under” two degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit) over pre-industrial era levels. Temperatur­es have already increased by 1.1 degrees Celsius from those levels.

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