California-Sized
Area of Ice Melts in Antarctica
by:
LiveScience.com 16 May 2007
Warm
temperatures melted an area of western Antarctica
that adds up to the size of California in January
2005, scientists report.
Satellite data collected by the scientists between
July 1999 and July 2005 showed clear signs that
melting had occurred in multiple distinct regions,
including far inland and at high latitudes and
elevations, where melt had been considered
unlikely.
"Antarctica has shown little to no warming in
the recent past with the exception of the Antarctic
Peninsula," said Konrad Steffen of the
University of Colorado, Boulder. "But now
large regions are showing the first signs of the
impacts of warming as interpreted by this satellite
analysis."
Changes in the ice mass of Antarctica, Earth's
largest freshwater reservoir, are important to
understanding global sea level rise. Large amounts
of Antarctic freshwater flowing into the ocean also
could affect ocean salinity, currents and global
climate.
NASA's QuikScat satellite detected snowmelt by
radar pulses that bounce off of ice that formed
when snowmelt refroze (just as ice cream turns to
ice when it is refrozen after being left out on the
counter too long.)
Maximum high temperatures of 41 degrees Fahrenheit
that persisted for about a week in Antarctica
caused a melt intense enough to create an extensive
ice layer.
Evidence of melting was found up to 560 miles
inland from the open ocean, farther than 85 degrees
south (about 310 miles from the South Pole) and
higher than 6,600 feet above sea level.
Water from the melted snow can penetrate cracks and
the ice, lubricating the continent's ice sheets,
sending them toward the ocean faster and raising
sea levels, the scientists said.
"Increases in snowmelt, such as this in 2005,
definitely could have an impact on larger scale
melting of Antarctica's ice sheets if they were
severe or sustained over time," Steffen said.
|