A huge section of
Antarctica’s ice shelf is rapidly thawing, according to a just-released study
by the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
The loss of ice from polar caps is
slowly but steadily raising the level of the Earth’s oceans, scientists say.
They predict it will be only a few years before the Larsen B Ice Shelf – at
1,600 square kilometers or almost 618 square miles – completely disengages from
the ground and breaks into hundreds of icebergs.
Two-thirds of the 10,000 year-old shelf
is already gone, said Ala Khazendar, the study’s lead scientist. "This is
a clear indication of the enormity of changes that are taking place in the
Antarctic Peninsula and elsewhere in Antarctica," he said.
Ice shelves are giant frozen platforms
that hang over the edges of the Antarctica continent, supported by ocean water
below. The largest of them is almost as big as France.
Khazendar said three glaciers that
supply the Larsen B shelf with ice are thinning and gaining speed.
"From our study, now we know that
these glaciers are flowing faster and most likely they are putting more ice
into the ocean," said Khazendar, who led a team at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory
in Pasadena, California.
Using sophisticated airborne
instruments, including radar, scientists already have noticed new cracks in the
ice that were not there when they submitted their findings nine months ago.
The disintegration is “happening fast
and it's just a matter of years,” Khazendar said.
Culled from Voice Of America.
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