Antarctica lost more ice in last 10 years: study
Mon Jan 14, 2008 3:06pm EST
By Deborah Zabarenko, Environment Correspondent
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Antarctica lost billions of tons of ice over the last
decade, contributing to the rising seas around the world, a climate researcher
said on Monday.
The ice melted from two particular parts of the southern continent, according
to Eric Rignot and colleagues, who wrote about the phenomenon in the journal
Nature Geoscience.
Using satellites to monitor most of Antarctica's coastline, the scientists
estimate that West Antarctica lost 132 billion tons of ice in 2006, compared to
about 83 billion tons in 1996. The Antarctic Peninsula, which stretches toward
South America, lost about 60 billion tons in 2006.
To put this in perspective, 4 billion tons of ice would be enough to provide
drinking water to the more than 60 million people of the United Kingdom for a
year, fellow author Jonathan Bamber of the University of Bristol said in a
statement.
This ice loss is not from the so-called ice sheets that cover the water
around the continent. This melting occurred in the glaciers that cover much of
the Antarctic land mass, and when that melts, it contributes to sea level rise
in a way that sea ice does not.
"One immediate consequence (of the melting Antarctic ice) is to raise sea
level," Rignot, of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, said in an e-mail interview.
Antarctica's contribution to global sea level rise was about 0.02 inch in 2006,
compared to about 0.01 inch in 1996.
Rignot noted that the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change figured
Antarctica would not contribute at all to sea level rise, and in fact predicted
a growth of the big ice sheet the covers much of the continent from enhanced
precipitation.
This prediction was supposed to come from increased evaporation from the
oceans as the planet warmed up, but this has not been observed so far in
Antarctica, Rignot said.
"In some regions the ice sheet is close to warm sources of water. ... The
parts of Antarctica we are seeing change right now are closest to these heat
sources," he said.
These findings are in line with what is happening to the Greenland ice sheet,
which melted at a record rate last year, and with studies of Arctic sea ice,
which ebbed to its lowest level ever measured in 2007.
A study last week by researchers at the University of Colorado at Boulder
found that older, thicker Arctic sea ice that lasts from year to year is giving
way to younger, thinner sea ice that is more susceptible to melting.
(Editing by Jackie Frank)
Original article: Reuters
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