Antarctica retreating across the sea floor
6 April 2018
Antarctica's great ice sheet is losing ground as it is eroded by warm ocean water circulating beneath its floating edge, a new UCL and University of Leeds study has found.
Research by the UK Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling (CPOM) has produced the first complete map of how the ice sheet's submarine edge, or "grounding line", is shifting. Most Antarctic glaciers flow straight into the ocean in deep submarine troughs, the grounding line is the place where their base leaves the sea floor and begins to float.
Their study, published in Nature Geoscience, shows that the Southern Ocean melted 1,463 km2 of Antarctica's underwater ice between 2010 and 2016 - an area the size of Greater London.
The team, led by Dr Hannes Konrad from the University of Leeds, found that grounding line retreat has been extreme at eight of the ice sheet's 65 biggest glaciers. The pace of deglaciation since the last ice age is roughly 25 metres per year. The retreat of the grounding line at these glaciers is more than five times that rate.
The biggest changes were seen in West Antarctica, where more than a fifth of the ice sheet has retreated across the sea floor faster than the pace of deglaciation.
Dr Konrad said: "Our study provides clear evidence that retreat is happening across the ice sheet due to ocean melting at its base, and not just at the few spots that have been mapped before now. This retreat has had a huge impact on inland glaciers, because releasing them from the sea bed removes friction, causing them to speed up and contribute to global sea level rise."
The researchers also found some unexpected behaviour. Although retreat of the Thwaites Glacier grounding line in West Antarctica has sped up, at the neighbouring Pine Island Glacier - until recently one of the fastest retreating on the continent - it has halted. This suggests that the ocean melting at its base may have paused.
Dr Konrad added: "These differences emphasise the complex nature of ice sheet instability across the continent, and being able to detect them helps us to pinpoint areas that deserve further investigation."
Grounding lines typically lie a kilometre or more below sea level and are inaccessible even to submersibles, so remote sensing methods for detecting them are extremely valuable.
The team were able to track the movement of Antarctica's grounding line using European Space Agency's CryoSat-2 across 16,000 km of the coastline.
The team from UCL processed the low level satellite altimetry data from Cryosat and other ESA missions to provide observations of ice elevation change data for further analysis by the science team at CPOM.
Although CryoSat-2 is designed to measure changes in the ice sheet elevation, these can be translated into horizontal motion at the grounding line using knowledge of the glacier and sea floor geometry and the Archimedes principle of buoyancy - which relates the thickness of floating ice to the height of its surface.
Study co-author, Alan Muir (UCL Earth Sciences, CPOM and UCL MSSL), said: "Engineers at the UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory have been working in a unique partnership with ESA and UK climate scientists at CPOM for the last 25 years to develop specialist methods of processing satellite altimetry to provide data for research in to how the polar ice sheets and sea ice are changing. As this paper shows, these data are essential in developing our understanding of how the dynamics of polar ice may effect climate change."
"We were delighted at how well CryoSat-2 is able to detect the motion of Antarctica's grounding lines. They are impossible places to access from below, and usually invisible on the ground, so it's a fantastic illustration of the value of satellite measurements for identifying and understanding environmental change," added study co-author Professor Andy Shepherd, from the School of Earth and Environment at Leeds.
Links
- Research paper in Nature Geoscience
- Alan Muir's academic profile
- UCL Earth Sciences
- CPOM
- UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory
- UCL Mathematical & Physical Sciences
Image
- Iceberg, Pixabay
Source
Media contact
Bex Caygill
Tel: +44 (0)20 3108 3846
Email: r.caygill [at] ucl.ac.uk