The Guardian (USA)

Satellite data shows entire Conger ice shelf has collapsed in Antarctica

- Donna Lu

An ice shelf about the size of Rome has completely collapsed in East Antarctica within days of record high temperatur­es, according to satellite data.

The Conger ice shelf, which had an approximat­e surface area of 1,200 sq km, collapsed around 15 March, scientists said on Friday.

East Antarctica saw unusually high temperatur­es last week, with Concordia station hitting a record temperatur­e of -11.8C on 18 March, more than 40C warmer than seasonal norms. The record temperatur­es were the result of an atmospheri­c river that trapped heat over the continent.

Ice shelves are extensions of ice sheets that float over the ocean, playing an important role in restrainin­g inland ice. Without them, inland ice flows faster into the ocean, resulting in sea level rise.

Dr Catherine Colello Walker, an earth and planetary scientist at Nasa and the Woods Hole Oceanograp­hic Institutio­n, said though the Conger ice shelf was relatively small, “it is one of the most significan­t collapse events anywhere in Antarctica since the early 2000s when the Larsen B ice shelf disintegra­ted”.

“It won’t have huge effects, most likely, but it’s a sign of what might be coming,” Walker said.

The Conger ice shelf had been shrinking since the mid-2000s, but only gradually until the beginning of 2020, Walker said. By 4 March this year, the ice shelf appeared to have lost more than half its surface area compared to January measuremen­ts of around 1,200 sq km.

Peter Neff, a glaciologi­st and assistant research professor at the University of Minnesota, said that to see even a small ice shelf collapse in East Antarctica was a surprise.

“We still treat East Antarctica like this massive, high, dry, cold and immovable ice cube,” he said. “Current understand­ing largely suggests you can’t get the same rapid rates of ice loss [as in West Antarctica] due to the geometry of the ice and bedrock there.”

“This collapse, especially if tied to the extreme heat brought by the midMarch atmospheri­c river event, will drive additional research into these processes in the region.”

Satellite data from the Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission showed that movement of the ice shelf began between 5 and 7 March, Neff said.

Helen Amanda Fricker, a professor of glaciology at the Scripps Polar Center, said that three calving events – when ice chunks break off from the edge of a glacier – had occurred in East Antarctica in March. In addition to the Conger ice shelf collapse, there were smaller calving events of the Totten glacier and Glenzer ice shelf.

“Much of East Antarctica is restrained by buttressin­g ice shelves, so we need to keep an eye on all the ice shelves there,” Fricker said in a tweet.

Prof Andrew Mackintosh, head of the school of earth, atmosphere and environmen­t at Monash University, said the Conger ice shelf had significan­t amounts of melting from the ocean beneath, which could have preconditi­oned it for collapse.

“Ice shelves lose mass as part of their natural behaviour – but the largescale collapse of an ice shelf is a very unusual event,” Mackintosh said. “This seems to be a collapse rather than normal behaviour.

“The collapse itself, however, may have been driven by surface melting as a result of the extremely warm temperatur­es recently recorded in this region. More evidence is needed to link this collapse to the recent warming.”

Surface melt was responsibl­e for the Larsen B ice shelf collapse in 2002.

The Antarctic heat event began on 15 March, said Alex Sen Gupta, an associate professor at the University of New South Wales. “It looks like large parts of eastern Antarctica reached over 20C warmer than normal,” he said.

Prof Matt King, who leads the Australian Centre for Excellence in Antarctic Science, said because ice shelves are already floating, the Conger ice shelf’s break-up would not in itself impact sea level much. He said that fortunatel­y the glacier behind the Conger ice shelf was small, so it would have a “tiny impact on sea level in the future”.

“We will see more ice shelves break up in the future with climate warming,” King said. “We will see massive ice shelves – way bigger than this one – break up. And those will hold back a lot of ice – enough to seriously drive up global sea levels.”

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Scientists are particular­ly concerned about the future of the Florida-sized Thwaites glacier – also nicknamed the “doomsday glacier” – which is around 100 times larger than Larsen B and contains enough water to raise sea levels globally by more than half a metre.

“The speed of the breakup of [the Conger] ice shelf reminds us that things can change quickly,” King said. “Our carbon emissions will have an impact in Antarctica, and Antarctica will come back to bite the rest of the world’s coastlines and it may happen faster than we think.”

 ?? Photograph: USNIC ?? Satellite data shows the Conger ice shelf has broken off iceberg C-38 and collapsed in Antartica.
Photograph: USNIC Satellite data shows the Conger ice shelf has broken off iceberg C-38 and collapsed in Antartica.

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