Washington:A critical Antarctic glacier is looking more vulnerable as satellite images show the ice shelf that blocks it from collapsing into the sea is breaking up much faster than before and spawning huge icebergs, a new study says.
The Pine Island Glacier's ice shelf loss accelerated in 2017, causing scientists to worry that with climate change the glacier's collapse could happen quicker than the many centuries predicted. The floating ice shelf acts like a cork in a bottle for the fast-melting glacier and prevents its much larger ice mass from flowing into the ocean.
That ice shelf has retreated by 20 kilometres between 2017 and 2020, according to a study in Friday's Science Advances. The crumbling shelf was caught on a time-lapse video from a European satellite that takes pictures every six days. "You can see stuff just tearing apart," said study lead author Ian Joughin, a University of Washington glaciologist. "So it almost looks like the speed-up itself is weakening the glacier... And so far we've lost maybe 20 per cent of the main shelf."
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Between 2017 and 2020, there were three large breakup events, creating icebergs more than 8 kilometres long and 22 miles 36 kilometres wide, which then split into lots of little pieces, Joughin said. There also were many smaller breakups. "It's not at all inconceivable that the whole shelf could give way and go within a few years," Joughin said. "I'd say that's a long shot, but not a very long shot."
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