Khaleej Times

Abu Dhabi professor shoots iceberg calving

- Staff Reporter

abu dhabi — A team of scientists led by an Abu Dhabi professor has captured the video of a four-mile iceberg breaking away from a glacier in eastern Greenland, an event that points to one of the forces behind global sea-level rise.

The iceberg, broken off from Greenland’s Helheim Glacier, would stretch from lower Manhattan up to Midtown in New York City.

“Global sea-level rise is both undeniable and consequent­ial,” said David Holland, professor at NYU’s Courant Institute of Mathematic­s and NYU Abu Dhabi, who led the research team. “By capturing how it unfolds, we can see, first-hand, its breath-taking significan­ce.”

The video shows sea level rising as the ice from the glacier enters the ocean. This phenomenon, also known as calving (the breaking off of large blocks of ice from a glacier), may also be instructiv­e to scientists and policy makers.

“Knowing how and in what ways icebergs calve is important for simulation­s because they ultimately determine global sea-level rise,” said Denise Holland, the logistics coordinato­r for NYU’s Environmen­tal Fluid Dynamics Laboratory and NYU Abu Dhabi’s Centre for Global Sea Level Change. “The better we understand what’s going on means we can create more accurate simulation­s to help predict and plan for climate change.”

The calving event captured on video began on June 22 at 11.30pm local time and took place over approximat­ely 30 minutes (the video has condensed the time of this occurrence to approximat­ely 90 seconds).

The video depicts a tabular, or wide and flat, iceberg calve off and move away from the glacier. As it does so, thin and tall icebergs — also known as pinnacle bergs — calve off and flip over. The camera angle then shifts to show movement further down the fjord, where one tabular iceberg crashes into a second, causing the first to split into two and flip over.

“The range of these different iceberg formation styles helps us build better computer models for simulating and modeling iceberg calving,” explained Denise Holland.

A 2017 estimate suggested that a collapse of the entire the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet would result in a 10-foot-rise in sea level — enough to overwhelm coastal areas around the globe, including New York City.

So far, the Thwaites Glacier, a part of the Western Antarctic Ice Sheet that has already drained a mass of water that is roughly the size of Great Britain or the state of Florida, has accounted for approximat­ely 4 per cent of global sealevel rise — an amount that has doubled since the mid-1990s. The research team is currently studying the forces behind sealevel rise — a developmen­t that has concerned scientists in recent decades because it points to the possibilit­y of global disruption­s due to climate change — under a grant from the National Science Foundation. The research is centered on the Thwaites Glacier.

The research is being carried by NYU’s Environmen­tal Fluid Dynamics Laboratory and NYU Abu Dhabi’s Center for Global Sea Level Change — both directed by David Holland.

reporters@khaleejtim­es.com

 ??  ?? A screen grab from the video of a four-mile iceberg breaking away from a glacier.
A screen grab from the video of a four-mile iceberg breaking away from a glacier.

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