Ice shelf cracking up (+pics & video)
'Like an explosion' - ancient landscape crumbles in shocking vision of global warming
Relevant offers
A gigantic Antarctic ice shelf is collapsing and global warming is being blamed.
View video: Antarctic ice sheet hangs by thread
An iceberg 41 kilometres long and 2.5km wide fell off the Wilkins Ice Shelf on the Antarctic Peninsula in late February. That triggered the disintegration of 405 square kilometres of ice.
The entire ice shelf - the size of the Hawke's Bay region - is now in danger of disintegrating.
The destruction was captured in satellite pictures from the National Snow and Ice Data Center in the United States.
Scientists said a thin strand of ice about 6km wide was all that was stopping the remaining 13,680sq km shelf from collapsing.
Professor Tim Naish, of Victoria University's Antarctic Research Centre, said the breakup was part of a pattern seen for about 50 years. Ice breaks were fully expected. "They're likely to be a more frequent event."
The Antarctic Peninsula had warmed by about 2 1/2 degrees in the past 50 years - more than other parts of the world. Remnants of the shelf could end up near New Zealand, he said.
In 2006, large icebergs drifted up the South Island's east coast.
Professor Naish said the breakdown of the Wilkins shelf would not contribute to rising sea levels. He compared it to an ice-cube in a glass of water - when the cube melts, the water level does not go up, as it has already been displaced.
But the disappearance of ice shelves could cause connected glaciers to melt and flow into the ocean more quickly, which would raise sea levels.
Niwa principal scientist David Wratt said the ice shelf collapse was likely to be a result of climate change. "It's certainly a sign that things are happening."
The peninsula's Larsen Ice Shelf had collapsed in 2002, with 500 billion tonnes of ice breaking up into bergs in less than a month.
Ted Scambos, a glaciologist at the snow and ice data center, alerted the British Antarctic Survey when he saw a big chunk of the Wilkins shelf breaking away on satellite images. An aircraft was sent to check the size of the collapse.
"Big, hefty chunks of ice, the size of small houses, look as though they've been thrown around like rubble -it's like an explosion," researcher Jim Elliot said.
By March 8, about 570sq km had broken off, including the chunk Dr Scambos had seen.
"I didn't expect to see things happen this quickly," British Antarctic Survey scientist David Vaughan said. "The ice shelf is hanging by a thread."
Dr Vaughan, who earlier predicted the Wilkins shelf would collapse in 30 years, said the collapse was the result of global warming.
Dr Scambos said scientists believed the shelf had been in place for hundreds of years.
ANTARCTIC HEATS UP
* The Wilkins Ice Shelf is a plate of floating ice on the southwest Antarctic Peninsula, which stretches toward South America. Temperature rises in the region have been greater than other places on Earth.
* The size of the threatened shelf is estimated to be about 13,680 square kilometres – about 22 times the size of Lake Taupo.
* Satellite images show about 570 square kilometres of ice have collapsed so far, including a large chunk that broke away on February 28. The rest of the shelf is "hanging by a thread", the British Antarctic Survey says.
* In 1998, the shelf lost 1100 square kilometres of ice, or about 6 per cent of its surface.
* Several other ice shelves have collapsed in the region in the past three decades. In 2002, the Larsen B shelf disappeared in just over 30 days.
- © Fairfax NZ News
Sponsored links
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
Hurricanes thumped by Crusaders at Mangatainoka
Bus changes raise fears in suburbs
Police access Facebook in Wellington murder investigation
Governor General's concert draws thousands
Top skateboarders shred in Wellington
Concerns for missing Featherston woman
Scorching Bay death now a matter for coroner
Police search for missing Featherston woman
Old trains more reliable than new Matangi
Tension high as lethal log pile cleared
Police name Hawke's Bay crash victim
'Trail blazer' Carmen farewelled in Auckland
Victim was holding bat, says witness
Engineer's report prompts mall evacuation
Gardener's paradise planned for Chch
Danny Lee drops back to pack at Pebble Beach
Obama tries to defuse birth control fight
Police recapture Madonna stalker
Promoter dismisses bike helmet harm study
Will bill make food safer or be a form of control?
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
EU courts Kiwis for science grants
Old trains more reliable than new Matangi
Police access Facebook in Wellington murder investigation
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
Helmet law halves cyclist numbers
Bus changes raise fears in suburbs
Both islands rattled by quakes overnight
Helmet law halves cyclist numbers
Old trains more reliable than new Matangi
Promoter dismisses bike helmet harm study
Hurricanes game set to be a rural rugby spectacle
Bus changes raise fears in suburbs
Search for oil, gas may near Wellington
• Story ideas: Email or call 0800 366 7678
• Website ideas: Email or tweet us
• Place an ad: Email or call 04 474 0000
• Subscribe: Email or call 0800 50 50 90
• No paper: Call 0800 50 50 90
• Start or stop your paper
• Buy a photo
• View the Digital Edition
• Make dompost.co.nz your homepage

Newest First
Oldest First
Should bicycle helmets be mandatory?









There was a 5.6 magnitude earthquake along the Antarctic Peninsula on March 17 at location 55.22S 135.12W which was likely the primary fracture mechanism. This has nothing to do with "global warming"