• Ice-ocean interactions are accelerating

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thu Mar 10 21:30:40 2022
    Ice-ocean interactions are accelerating melting in West Antarctica


    Date:
    March 10, 2022
    Source:
    University of California - Irvine
    Summary:
    An analysis of Antarctica's Pope, Smith and Kohler glaciers has
    revealed an aggressive pattern of retreat connected to high melt
    rates of floating ice in the Amundsen Sea Embayment sector of
    West Antarctica.



    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    An analysis of Antarctica's Pope, Smith and Kohler glaciers by researchers
    at the University of California, Irvine, NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
    the University of Houston and other institutions has revealed an
    aggressive pattern of retreat connected to high melt rates of floating
    ice in the Amundsen Sea Embayment sector of West Antarctica.


    ==========================================================================
    In a paper published recently in Nature Geoscience, the team reports
    that the grounding line -- where ice moves off the land and begins to
    float -- of Pope Glacier retreated 3.5 kilometers in 3.6 months for an
    average of nearly 12 kilometers per year in 2017. Between 2016 and 2018,
    the western portion of Smith Glacier retreated at 2 kilometers per year
    and Kohler Glacier at 1.3 kilometers per year.

    Observations from 2018 to 2020 showed a slowing of these rates, but the movement is still faster than anticipated by the glaciology community's
    yearly numerical models, according to the researchers.

    "Alpine glaciers retreat by about 1 kilometer per century, so it's
    alarming to see these Antarctic glaciers receding at as much as 12
    times that rate per year," said co-author Eric Rignot, UCI Donald Bren Professor and Chancellor's Professor of Earth system science and NASA
    JPL senior research scientist. "This pace is at the upper limit of what
    our models can replicate." The Pine Island, Thwaites, Haynes, Pope,
    Smith and Kohler glaciers flow into West Antarctica's Amundsen Sea
    Embayment, which covers an area roughly the size of Texas. The volume
    of non-floating ice in these glaciers is equivalent to a 1.2-meter
    (nearly 4-foot) increase in global sea level.

    Rignot and his colleagues surveyed the glaciers multiple times per year
    via synthetic aperture radar interferometry observations from Italy's COSMO-SkyMed satellite system. Combining these data with digital elevation models of the ice surface generated through readings from the German
    Aerospace Center's TanDEM- X satellite, the glaciologists were able to
    gain valuable information about the movement of glacier grounding lines
    and ice sheet thickness since 2014.

    Rignot said the main culprit in the rapid glacier retreat is the
    interaction of floating ice and seawater, particularly in newly formed
    cavities at the ice- ocean boundary.

    "Pressurized seawater intrudes into sub-glacial gaps and melts grounded
    ice," said lead author Pietro Milillo, an associate project scientist
    in UCI's Department of Earth System Science during this research project
    who's now an assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at
    the University of Houston. "This process has an added effect of reducing
    basal resistance, which speeds up glacier retreat." Equivalent to about 6 centimeters of global sea level rise, the Pope, Smith and Kohler glaciers account for a relatively small contribution in the Amundsen Sea Embayment sector. But the physical dynamics of the retreat of these three smaller glaciers that were the focus of the UCI/NASA JPL study are also in effect
    for the Thwaites and Pine Island glaciers, according to Rignot.

    "The destabilization of the Thwaites and Pine Island glaciers, which are
    also subject to rapid retreat from the intrusion of ocean water beneath
    the ice, can raise global sea level by more than a meter and cause the destabilization of a huge swath of West Antarctica," he said. "When that happens, which could be in as soon as a few years, we will have a major
    problem on our hands." Joining Rignot and Milillo on this project --
    which was funded by NASA's Cryospheric Sciences Program and the Natural Environment Research Council/ National Science Foundation's International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration - - were Bernd Scheuchl, associate project scientist, and Jeremie Mouginot, associate researcher, of UCI's Department
    of Earth System Science; Paola Rizzoli, Jose Luis Bueso-Bello and Pau Prats-Iraola of the German Aerospace Center's Microwaves and Radar
    Institute; and Luigi Dini of the Italian Space Agency in Matera.


    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by
    University_of_California_-_Irvine. Note: Content may be edited for style
    and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. P. Milillo, E. Rignot, P. Rizzoli, B. Scheuchl, J. Mouginot,
    J. L. Bueso-
    Bello, P. Prats-Iraola, L. Dini. Rapid glacier retreat rates
    observed in West Antarctica. Nature Geoscience, 2022; 15 (1):
    48 DOI: 10.1038/s41561- 021-00877-z ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/03/220310143718.htm

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