In
Antarctica, Proof That
Action On climate Change
Is More Urgent Than Ever
By Steve Connor
06 June 2007
The
Independent
Fears
that global sea levels this century may rise faster and further than
expected are supported by a study showing that 300 glaciers in Antarctica
have begun to move more quickly into the ocean.
Scientists believe that the
accelerated movement of glaciers in the Antarctic Peninsula indicates
a dramatic shift in the way melting ice around the world contributes
to overall increases in global sea levels.
Instead of simply adding
huge volumes of meltwater to the sea, scientists have found rising temperatures
are causing glaciers as far apart as Alaska, Greenland and now Antarctica
to break up and slip into the ocean at a faster rate than expected.
The findings will raise concerns
within the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) which,
earlier this year, downplayed the so-called "dynamic" nature
of melting glaciers - when rising temperatures cause them to break up
quickly rather than simply melt slowly.
Using radar images taken
between 1993 and 2003, scientists at the British Antarctic Survey in
Cambridge mapped a 12 per cent increase in the average rate of movement
of more than 300 glaciers in the Antarctic Peninsula over the period.
The scientists believe that
their findings are among the first to suggest that as glaciers being
to melt they experience a physical transformation that causes an acceleration
in their movement into the sea.
"We're only just now
getting to grips with just how big these dynamic processes may be. There
are still a lot of surprises out there," said David Vaughan, a
glaciologist at the British Antarctic Survey and a co-author of the
study.
"It is yet another example
of how subpolar glaciers are responding very quickly to climate change
because they are close to the temperature transition from ice to water,"
Dr Vaughan said.
"Scientists want to
know why these things are happening because that's the route to the
prediction of future sea levels."
In its fourth report published
in February, the IPCC said sea levels this century could rise by between
20 cms and 43cms but it accepted that this could be a serious underestimate
if ice sheets and glaciers undergo the sort of dynamic changes that
existing computer models do not take fully into account.
Hamish Pritchard, a co-author
of the study published in the Journal of Geophysical Research, said
the findings demonstrated how melting glaciers can change in a way that
speeds up their eventual disappearance into the sea.
The study showed that rising
temperatures cause glaciers to become thinner, which makes them more
buoyant when resting on submerged bedrock, so allowing them to slip
faster into the ocean, Dr Pritchard said.
"The Antarctic Peninsula
has experienced some of the fastest warming on Earth, nearly 3C over
the past half-century. Eighty-seven per cent of its glaciers have been
retreating during that period and now we see these glaciers are also
speeding up," Dr Pritchard said.
"They are speeding up
in a steady, progressive way. Warming causes widespread thinning, which
causes widespread acceleration due to an increase in buoyancy. They
speed up and the fronts of the glaciers break off and float away."
Chris Rapley, director of
the British Antarctic Survey, said: "Without doubt we are seeing
a striking global picture of ice on the retreat."
© 2007 Independent News and Media Limited
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