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Saturday, 3 June 2017
Giant Antarctic iceberg 'hanging by a thread', say scientists
Split in the Larsen C ice shelf will release an iceberg a quarter of
the size of Wales, changing the landscape of the Antarctic peninsula
An aerial view of the Larsen C ice rift in Antarctica. The rift is now
nearly 200km long, and will release an iceberg 5,000 sq km in size.
Photograph: John Sonntag/AFP/Getty Images
A giant section of an Antarctic ice shelf is hanging by a thread and could break off at any moment, researchers have revealed.
The split in the Larsen C ice shelf of the Antarctic peninsula will release a huge iceberg 5,000 sq km in size – an area about a quarter of the size of Wales.
“The rift is nearly 200km long now, and it has turned towards the
ice front, suggesting that it has only got that last piece to go – and
that last section is only 13km,” said Professor Adrian Luckman, a
scientist at Swansea University and leader of the UK’s Midas project – an endeavour that has been monitoring the situation at the Larsen C ice shelf.
“Like any fracture in something, the longer the fracture becomes the
more pressure there is on the remaining part of it. So it is really only
hanging by a thread here,” he told the Guardian.
While the iceberg will not be the biggest ever recorded – the title
is held by Iceberg B-15, a mass that broke off the Ross Ice Shelf in the
year 2000 and had an area the size of Jamaica – it is expected to be
among the top 10.
“It is a big event and it will change the landscape of the Antarctic
peninsula - the Larsen ice shelf will be left 10% smaller,” said
Luckman.
The team have revealed
that the latest images show that between 25 May and 31 May alone, the
rift grew by 17km – the largest hike since the start of the year.
Luckman cautioned that it was not possible to say whether the fracture was a result of climate change.
“The rift has been there for decades; it might well have broken
through at this moment, whatever had gone on. It could just be one of
those cyclical factors in ice shelves – this is how they work, they grow
and then they give birth to icebergs.”
Aerial footage of the split in the Larsen C ice shelf taken at the start of the year.
But he pointed out that climate change “won’t have helped”, adding
that the process has been linked to the breakdown of other ice shelves.
“The disintegration of Larsen A and Larsen B slightly to the north –
it is widely accepted that they are climate-warming results,” he said.
“What happens to these ice shelves [of the Antarctic Peninsula] is in
some ways a lesson for what might happen to the larger ice shelves that
actually hold back ice from the main ice sheets – and that is
potentially very significant into the far future,” Luckman added.
The latest update comes in the same week that US president Donald Trump announced that the US will be withdrawing from the Paris climate accord- an agreement signed in 2015 by more than 190 countries to tackle global warming.
With the next news from Larsen C – based on satellite data using
radar imaging systems – not expected until Tuesday, the current state of
the rift remains a tantalising mystery.
“It could be any time now, days or weeks – it could have gone already
because we haven’t had an image of the area for the last two days. But
it could still hang on for months because it is just very difficult to
predict how ice will fracture, because we don’t know very much about
this ice – it is quite remote” said Luckman. “My feeling is that it is
going to go fairly soon.”
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