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Related: About this forumAntarctica: Rising bedrock raises hope
Written by Laura Cole
28 Jul 2018
New findings say that the uplift rate of the West Antarctic ice Sheet is unusually high
28 Jul 2018
Rising bedrock under the West Antarctic Ice Sheet could prevent climate change ice loss
It is not often that positive news comes from Antarctica, especially when it comes to ice. Nonetheless, a team of geologists from Ohio University have discovered that the bedrock of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is rising at a rapid pace. The researchers describe it as a game changer when it comes to ice loss prevention in the region.
Scientists were already aware the West Antarctic ground was rising it is caused by the bedrock rebounding after ice melt. The main surprise was the rate of the uplift under the Amundsen Sea a speedy 41 millimetres per year. How does that help preserve ice? The idea is that rising rock creates pointed features that pin the ice sheet in place from underneath pinning points which slow the ices descent to the sea. The researchers also predict that the rising bedrock could decrease the gradient of glacier slopes, further slowing the ice loss. Professor of Earth Science and contributing author, Terry Wilson, explained these feedbacks could slow or even stop the process of freshwater ice melting into the sea. Under many realistic climate models, this should be enough to stabilise the ice sheet.
The rate of uplift is unusually high. It is faster even than Alaska and Iceland, which are considered to have quick rates of uplift of 20 to 30mm per year. The exception is being put down to geology. Valentina Barletta, lead author of the study, believes there is hotter and more fluid mantle under the bedrock, which causes the ground to rise quicker. She predicts the rate will become even faster in time, by around two or three times through the next century.
More:
http://geographical.co.uk/nature/polar/item/2830-rising-bedrock-raises-hope
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Antarctica: Rising bedrock raises hope (Original Post)
Judi Lynn
Jul 2018
OP
CaliforniaPeggy
(149,588 posts)1. Very interesting, Judi. Thanks for posting this. n/t
msongs
(67,395 posts)2. that's a whopping 1.6 inches a year lol. gonna be awhile nt
Boomer
(4,168 posts)3. They stuck the bad news at the end of the article
"There is some bad news. The uplift may have disguised how much the ice has already diminished on the West Antarctica Ice Sheet. "
The rebound isn't limited to just what's above water. It means that the crust under water is also experiencing isostatic rebound.
The result will be that water that would have been in the oceans around Antarctica is going to be pushed elsewhere, helping to increase sea level elsewhere (unless there's corresponding underwater subsidence, in which case it's just sloshed into a different place at the same level).
Javaman
(62,521 posts)5. also rising bedrock increases the chance of earthquakes. nt