13 September 2017

Big icecube

Yahoo has an article by Stephanie Pappas about the latest from Antarctica:

A new view from space shows Antarctica's newest bouncing baby iceberg, and this baby's a behemoth: at approximately two thousand square miles, the iceberg represents about ten percent of the Larsen C ice shelf, which it was a part of until it broke off this week. The iceberg is slightly bigger than Delaware in area and similarly proportioned: while the Blue Hen State is a hundred miles long, the Larsen C iceberg measures about 99 miles from end to end, meaning it would take a little over an hour and a half to traverse it by car, assuming you had a car that could do sixty mph on uneven floating sea ice.
An instrument aboard NASA's Aqua satellite snapped one of the first images of this new iceberg on 12 July 2017, using thermal measurements to distinguish between ice and open water. The image shows the iceberg floating between the rest of the Larsen C ice shelf off the Antarctic Peninsula and the fractured sea ice floating on the Weddell Sea.
The rift that led to the iceberg's calving has existed since the 1960s, according to NASA, but it didn't start growing until 2014. Scientists have been monitoring the crack closely since then. By April of 2017, only ten miles of ice connected the iceberg to the main ice sheet, according to the UK-based research group Project MIDAS. In late June, the same group reported that the speed of the ice was increasing to levels never before measured on Larsen C, indicating an imminent calving event.
The final break occurred sometime between 10 and 12 July 2017. The ice that broke away weighs more than a trillion tons, but it won't substantially affect sea levels on its own, as it was already floating. The Larsen C ice shelf has now retreated farther back than at any time in recorded history, according to Project MIDAS glaciologist Martin O'Leary of Swansea University; the loss of the iceberg could make the shelf vulnerable to collapse. A collapse of the shelf would have an impact on sea levels, as land-based ice on the Antarctic continent would have a clearer route to the sea. However, scientists aren't yet sure what the future holds for Larsen C. "In the ensuing months and years, the ice shelf could either gradually regrow, or may suffer further calving events which may eventually lead to collapse; opinions in the scientific community are divided," Swansea University glaciologist Adrian Luckman said in a statement. "Our models say it will be less stable, but any future collapse remains years or decades away."
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