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nitpicker

(7,153 posts)
Tue Jan 28, 2020, 07:31 AM Jan 2020

Antarctica melting: Journey to the 'doomsday glacier'

https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-51097309

Antarctica melting: Journey to the 'doomsday glacier'

By Justin Rowlatt
Chief Environment correspondent

6 hours ago

The images are murky at first.

Sediment sweeps past the camera as Icefin, a bright yellow remotely operated robot submarine, moves tentatively forward under the ice.

Then the waters begin to clear.

Icefin is under almost half a mile (600m) of ice, at the front of one the fastest-changing large glaciers in the world.
(snip)

Icefin has reached the point at which the warm ocean water meets the wall of ice at the front of the mighty Thwaites glacier - the point where this vast body of ice begins to melt.

Glaciologists have described Thwaites as the "most important" glacier in the world, the "riskiest" glacier, even the "doomsday" glacier.

It is massive - roughly the size of Britain.

It already accounts for 4% of world sea level rise each year - a huge figure for a single glacier - and satellite data show that it is melting increasingly rapidly.

There is enough water locked up in it to raise world sea level by more than half a metre.

And Thwaites sits like a keystone right in the centre of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet - a vast basin of ice that contains more than 3m of additional potential sea level rise.

Yet, until this year, no-one has attempted a large-scale scientific survey on the glacier.

The Icefin team, along with 40 or so other scientists, are part of the International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration, a five-year, $50m (£38m) joint UK-US effort to understand why it is changing so rapidly.
(snip)
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Antarctica melting: Journey to the 'doomsday glacier' (Original Post) nitpicker Jan 2020 OP
Thanks for this article. Mickju Jan 2020 #1
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