Antarctica’s ‘Doomsday Glacier’ heading for collapse sooner than expected

Scientists studying Antarctica’s Thwaites Glacier, often  referred to as the ‘Doomsday Glacier,’ have made a startling discovery.  According to a report by CNN, researchers found that the glacier is  melting increasingly rapidly and may be on an irreversible path to  collapse, which could lead to catastrophic global sea level rise.

Their findings, detailed across a series of studies, offer  the clearest understanding yet of this dynamic glacier. The outlook is  dire, the scientists warned in a report published on Thursday,  summarising the key conclusions from their six years of research.

The team discovered that ice loss from Thwaites is expected  to accelerate this century. Rob Larter, a marine geophysicist with the  British Antarctic Survey and a member of the research team, said,  “Thwaites’ retreat has significantly sped up over the last 30 years. Our  findings suggest it is poised to retreat even more rapidly.”

The scientists predict that Thwaites Glacier and the  Antarctic Ice Sheet could collapse within the next 200 years, with  devastating consequences. Thwaites alone holds enough ice to raise sea  levels by over 2 feet, but because it acts as a barrier holding back the  Antarctic Ice Sheet, its collapse could eventually trigger a sea level  rise of around 10 feet, threatening coastal cities from Miami and London  to Bangladesh and the Pacific Islands.

Scientists have long understood that Thwaites, the size of  Florida, was particularly vulnerable due to its geography. The land  beneath the glacier slopes downward, exposing more ice to warmer ocean  water as it melts. However, until recently, the exact mechanisms driving  its retreat were poorly understood.

“Antarctica remains the largest unknown in forecasting  future sea level rise,” the scientists from the International Thwaites  Glacier Collaboration (ITGC) said in a statement.

Over the past six years, researchers conducted a range of  experiments to bring more clarity. One breakthrough came from Icefin, a  torpedo-shaped robot sent to the glacier’s grounding the point where the  ice rises from the seabed and begins to float, a key area of  vulnerability. Kiya Riverman, a glaciologist from the University of  Portland, said the first images from Icefin approaching the grounding  line were emotional for the team. “For glaciologists, this was like the  moon landing,” she said at a press conference. “It was a significant  moment-we were seeing this critical area for the first time.”

The images from Icefin revealed unexpected melting  patterns, with warm ocean water flowing through deep cracks and forming  ‘staircase’ structures in the ice. Another study using satellite and GPS  data showed that tides were pushing seawater more than six miles  beneath Thwaites, accelerating the melting by forcing warm water under  the ice.

In addition, researchers examined the glacier’s history. A  team led by Julia Wellner from the University of Houston analysed marine  sediment cores to reconstruct the glacier’s past, finding that it began  retreating rapidly in the 1940s, likely triggered by a strong El Nino  event. “These findings give us a broader understanding of ice behaviour,  providing more detail than what we can see from modern observations,”  Wellner told CNN.

Amid the alarming news, there was one piece of positive  information. Scientists had feared that if Thwaites’ ice shelves  collapsed, it could expose towering cliffs of ice that would quickly  crumble into the ocean, causing a chain reaction of collapse. However,  computer models indicated that while this process is possible, it is  less likely than previously thought.

Despite this, the overall outlook remains bleak. The  scientists predict that Thwaites and the Antarctic Ice Sheet could be  lost entirely by the 23rd Century. Even with immediate action to curb  fossil fuel use, which is not happening at the necessary pace, it may  already be too late to prevent the glacier’s collapse. (NDTV)

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