www.natureworldnews.com Open in urlscan Pro
34.111.1.29  Public Scan

URL: https://www.natureworldnews.com/amp/articles/50873/20220518/antarctica-ice-shelves-ice-growth.htm
Submission: On December 24 via api from LV — Scanned from DE

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

Close the sidebar
 * Home
 * Animals
 * Biology
 * Environment
 * Health & Medicine
 * Tech Travel
 * Space

Close the sidebar

 * Home
 * Environment


DESPITE GLOBAL WARMING, ANTARCTICA ICE SHELVES EXHIBIT GROWTH FOR THE PAST 20
YEARS

By Rich Co May 18, 2022 12:11 PM EDT

Dr. Frazer Christie of the Scott Polar Research Institute (SPRI) in Cambridge
spearheads a research team studying the growth of some Antarctic ice shelves
over the past two decades.


ICE SHELF

The National Snow & Ice Data Center (NSIDC) defines ice shelves as permanent
floating sheets of ice that connect to a landmass.

Ice shelves form when ice from enormous ice sheets enters the sea through
glaciers and ice streams. Low ocean temperatures prevent the newly arrived ice
from melting and promote its growth.

Ice shelves can survive for thousands of years because they are protected by
nearby landforms. It gains ice from the land and shrinks as it is calved off by
icebergs.

The floating mass of ice does not directly contribute to sea-level rise.
However, if an ice shelf collapses, the ice streams and glaciers that are
constantly pushing on it would flow faster into the ocean. This then leads to a
rise in sea level.

Ad





COLLAPSE AND ADVANCE IN ANTARCTICA

The collapse of the Larsen A and B ice shelves on the eastern Antarctic
Peninsula in 1995 and 2002, respectively, accelerated the flow of ice toward the
ocean, contributing to sea-level rise.

New studies show that there is ice advance or ice growth in an area behind
Larsen D.

An increasing trend in the number of icebergs calving from the eastern Antarctic
Peninsula began in 2020. Scientists used a combination of historical satellite
measurements and ocean records to map the advance.

Christie and his team surveyed the coastline of the eastern Antarctic Peninsula
in 2003 and 2019 and found that 85% of the 1,400-km-long ice shelf underwent
continuous advance.





Over the past two decades, the area went through an extensive retreat. However,
the study suggests that changes in atmospheric circulation resulted in more sea
ice being carried by the wind to the coast. As a result, the ice shelves in the
area are advancing.

Read also: Collapse of Antarctica's 'Doomsday Glacier' Could Trigger Deadly
Tsunamis and Swallow Islands


2019 WENDELL SEA EXPEDITION

During the expedition off the eastern Antarctic Peninsula, portions of the ice
shelf were in their most advanced position since satellite records began in the
early 1960s, according to Professor Julian Dowdeswell, the expedition's chief
scientist and co-author of the study. Dowdeswell is also from SPRI.

The team used the expedition's findings, satellite imagery from the past 60
years, and state-of-the-art ocean and atmosphere models to conduct a detailed
study of the spatial and temporal patterns of ice shelf change.





MORE ICE SHELF CALVING AND ICEBERGS

Studies are underway to predict how sea ice in Antarctica will evolve in
response to climate change. Some models suggest that sea ice in the Southern
Ocean may decrease overall, while other studies suggest the possibility of an
increase in sea ice.

However, studies conducted by Christie and his team suggest that the breakup of
icebergs in 2020 could signal the beginning of a change in atmospheric patterns
and a return to a decline in sea ice.

Study co-author Dr. Wolfgang Rack of the University of Canterbury pointed out
that the event could be a transition back to atmospheric patterns observed in
the 1990s that encouraged sea ice loss. This could lead to further ice shelf
calving soon.

Read also: Solid Aerosols Found in the Arctic Can Affect the Cloud and Climate
Formation: New Study 

© 2022 NatureWorldNews.com All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without
permission.



MOST POPULAR

 * FIRST-TIME SIGHTING OF PINK IGUANA HATCHLINGS IN GALAPAGOS RAISES HOPE FOR
   SAVING THE ENDANGERED REPTILE

 * 15-FOOT CROCODILE TURNS INTO CRANKY DENTAL PATIENT WHEN MUSCLE RELAXER WEARS
   OFF — AUSTRALIA

 * SIGNIFICANT FREEZING EVENT IN NORTHWEST US PUTS ICE ON RUNWAY, SEA-TAC
   AIRPORT FLIGHTS CANCELED

 * AT LEAST 5 DIED FROM ROAD CRASHES IN OKLAHOMA, KANSAS DUE TO HEAVY SNOW

 * Home
 * Animals
 * Biology
 * Environment
 * Health & Medicine
 * Tech Travel
 * Space

 * About Us
 * Contact Us
 * Privacy Policy
 * Terms & Conditions

© Copyright 2022 NATURE WORLD NEWS All rights reserved.