Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

One of the biggest icebergs ever recorded has broken off of Antarctica.

Trillion-ton mass pulls free of Antarctica shelf

- By Alexandra Zavis and Sean Greene Los Angeles Times

Sometime in the last few days, a block of ice the size of Delaware broke away from Antarctica and is now floating freely in the Weddell Sea.

The iceberg, which at around 1 trillion tons is one of the largest on record, poses no immediate threat to sea levels. But scientists say the break may have altered the profile of the continent’s western peninsula for decades to come and could offer a preview of what global warming might do to maritime ice shelves.

What happens next to the iceberg is difficult to predict. “It may remain in one piece but is more likely to break into fragments,” Luckman said in a statement. “Some of the ice may remain in the area for decades, while parts of the iceberg may drift north into warmer waters.”

There is still debate about whether man-made global warming played a role.

Martin O’Leary, a glaciologi­st at Project Midas, said that the process known as calving is a natural event. “We’re not aware of any link to human-induced climate change,” he said.

But scientists say the break has reduced Larsen C by more than 12 percent, which some worry could have a destabiliz­ing effect on the remainder of the shelf, among Antarctica’s largest.

Larsen C, which is nearly half a mile thick at its largest point, floats on the ocean at the edge of the Antarctic Peninsula, holding back a flow of glaciers that feed into it.

“As climate warming advances farther south, it will affect larger and larger ice shelves that currently hold back bigger and bigger glaciers, so their collapse will contribute more to sea level rise,” said Eric Rignot, a University of California, Irvine glaciologi­st and research scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

Named for the man who discovered it in 1893, the Norwegian explorer Carl Anton Larsen, the Larsen Ice Shelf is actually a series of many

floating chunks of ice. Larsen C, the largest, was first photograph­ed in the 1960s. Even then, the fateful crack was already visible, according to NASA.

Ice shelves are thick platforms of ice floating on the surface of the ocean. They form as ice sheets large accumulati­ons of snow on top of a landmass — and flow downhill to the ocean.

Ice shelves naturally shed weight in the form of icebergs, the process called calving, or through melting on the bottom. One way to know if a sheet is healthy is to see if it’s gaining as much ice as it is losing.

Ice sheets grow as snow accumulate­s and freezes on the surface, and lose ice through melting and calving of their shelves.

If a large enough iceberg calves off, an ice shelf could collapse.

That’s what happened to Larsen C’s neighbors, Larsen A and Larsen B, in 1995 and 2002, respective­ly.

“That’s just the way Antarctica works,” said Helen Fricker, a glaciologi­st at the Scripps Institutio­n of Oceanograp­hy who studies the Larsen C ice sheet.

A collapse of Larsen C is probably decades away, Rignot said. But the ice shelf has now retreated farther back than it has in the last 125 years.

“More bergs will detach; it will become weaker and eventually fall apart in a domino effect,” he said.

 ?? British Antarctic Survey ?? The Larsen C ice shelf in Antarctica in February. A vast iceberg with twice the volume of Lake Erie and weighing around 1 trillion tons broke off from the Larsen C ice shelf, scientists said this past week.
British Antarctic Survey The Larsen C ice shelf in Antarctica in February. A vast iceberg with twice the volume of Lake Erie and weighing around 1 trillion tons broke off from the Larsen C ice shelf, scientists said this past week.

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