Denman Glacier (E. Antarctica) Ice Loss Rises 10-Fold Since 2017 To 71 Billion Tons Per Year
The Denman ice shelf in east Antarctica is melting at a rate of 70.8bn tonnes a year, according to researchers from Australias national science agency, thanks to the ingress of warm sea water. The CSIRO researchers, led by senior scientist Esmee van Wijk, said their observations suggested the Denman glacier was potentially at risk of unstable retreat.
The glacier, in remote east Antarctica, sits atop the deepest land canyon on Earth. It holds a volume of ice equivalent to 1.5m of sea level rise. Until relatively recently, it was thought east Antarctica would not experience the same rapid ice loss that is occurring in the west. But some recent studies have shown warm water is reaching that part of the continent too.
The Australian scientists used profiling float measurements to show how much warm water was reaching the deep trough that extends beneath the glacier. They had been intending to study another glacier the Totten but when the float drifted away it approached the Denman. The float collected observations every five days over four months from December 2020. From that data, the scientists made the estimate of how quickly warm water was causing the ice shelf the front part of the glacier that floats in the ocean to melt. Melting of the floating part of the glacier does not add to sea level rise. But Stephen Rintoul, a CSIRO fellow and one of the papers authors, said as the ice shelf became thinner or weaker it provided less resistance to the flow of ice from Antarctica into the ocean.
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Other recent research found that with snowfall factored in, the Denman had still lost about 268bn tonnes of ice about 7bn tonnes a year between 1979 and 2017. Rintoul said the researchers hoped to collect further data using Australias new icebreaker, RSV Nuyina, on a trip planned for early 2025. Sue Cook, an ice shelf glaciologist at the University of Tasmania, said until relatively recently east Antarctica was not considered likely to experience rapid ice loss because the water in that region was mainly cold. But recently weve realised that in some locations relatively warm water can reach the east Antarctic ice sheet and this paper confirms that one of those locations is the Denman glacier, Cook said.
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/oct/14/east-antarctic-glacier-melting-at-708bn-tonnes-a-year-due-to-warm-sea-water