Antarctica skating on thin ice

A view of the Jutulsessen mountain range in east Antarctica, a sector claimed by Norway about 250 km (155 miles) from the sea, January 19, 2008. Nations claiming parts of Antarctica are quietly staking out rights to the seabed, in stark contrast to the North Pole where Russia ostentatiously planted a flag to back its claim. Picture taken January 19, 2008. To match feature ANTARCTICA/CLAIMS REUTERS/Alister Doyle (ANTARCTICA)

A view of the Jutulsessen mountain range in east Antarctica, a sector claimed by Norway about 250 km (155 miles) from the sea, January 19, 2008. Nations claiming parts of Antarctica are quietly staking out rights to the seabed, in stark contrast to the North Pole where Russia ostentatiously planted a flag to back its claim. Picture taken January 19, 2008. To match feature ANTARCTICA/CLAIMS REUTERS/Alister Doyle (ANTARCTICA)

Published Aug 29, 2013

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London - The massive ice sheet of East Antarctica, which is up to four kilometres thick and holds enough frozen water to raise sea levels by more than 50 metres, is more unstable than previous studies have suggested, scientists said.

Declassified images from spy satellites going back 50 years have revealed that the coastal glaciers and floating sea ice of Antarctica are more susceptible to air and sea temperatures than previously supposed, the researchers found.

The images, which cover thousands of miles of East Antarctic's coastline and include measurements of 175 glaciers, show there is rapid and synchronised melting and freezing when local temperatures increase or fall, according to the study published in Nature.

“We know that these large glaciers undergo cycles of advance and retreat that are triggered by large icebergs breaking off at the terminus, but this can happen independently from climate change,” said Dr Chris Stokes, of Durham University, who led the study.

“It was a big surprise therefore to see rapid and synchronous changes in advance and retreat, but it made perfect sense when we looked at the climate and sea-ice data. When it was warm and the sea-ice decreased, most glaciers retreated, but when it was cooler and the sea ice increased, the glaciers advanced,” Dr Stokes said.

Melting sea ice and glaciers could affect the speed at which the ice sheet on the land melts and falls into the sea. “In many ways, these measurements of terminus change are like canaries in a mine - they don't give us all the information we would like, but they are worth taking notice of,” he said.

Climate scientists have focused on the ice sheets of the West Antarctic and Greenland because these were thought to be the less stable then the much bigger ice sheet of East Antarctica, which sits on a mountain range and is much colder than other ice sheets.

Dr Stokes said: “If the climate is going to warm in the future, our study shows that large parts of the margins of the East Antarctic ice sheet are vulnerable to the kinds of changes that are worrying us in Greenland and West Antarctica - acceleration, thinning and retreat.”

He added: “We need to monitor their behaviour more closely and maybe reassess our rather conservative predictions of future ice sheet dynamics in East Antarctica.” - The Independent

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