Credit:
Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain
A
glacier on Antarctica's Eastern Peninsula experienced the fastest retreat
recorded in modern history—in just two months, nearly 50% of the glacier
disintegrated.
A new CU Boulder-led study, published in Nature
Geoscience, details how and why Antarctica's Hektoria Glacier retreated at
an unprecedented rate in 2023, losing a total of eight kilometers of ice in two
months. The main driver was the glacier's underlying flat bedrock that enabled
the glacier to go afloat after it substantially thinned, causing a rare calving
process.
The new findings may help researchers
identify other glaciers to monitor for rapid retreat in the future. Hektoria
Glacier is small by Antarctic standards—only about 115 square miles, or roughly
the size of Philadelphia—but a similar rapid retreat on larger Antarctic
glaciers could have catastrophic implications for global sea level rise.
"When we flew over Hektoria in early 2024, I couldn't believe the vastness of the area that had collapsed," said Naomi Ochwat, lead author and CIRES postdoctoral researcher. "I had seen the fjord and notable mountain features in the satellite images, but being there in person filled me with astonishment at what had happened."
Hektoria Glacier on Antarctica's Eastern
Peninsula experienced the fastest retreat recorded in modern history—in just
two months, nearly 50 percent of the glacier disintegrated. This video
illustrates how and why Hektoria Glacier retreated so rapidly in late 2022 and
early 2023. New CU Boulder-ledresearch shows the main driver was underlying
flat bedrock that enabled the glacier to go afloat after it substantially
thinned, causing a rare rapid calving process. Credit: Lauren Lipuma/CIRES
The research team, which included
CIRES Senior Research Scientist Ted Scambos, surveyed the area surrounding
Hektoria Glacier using satellites and remote sensing for a separate research
study. They wanted to understand why sea ice broke away from a glacier a decade
after an ice shelf collapse in 2002.
While analyzing results for the
first study, Ochwat noticed data that indicated Hektoria had all but
disappeared over a two-month period.
So, she set out to understand: why
did this glacier retreat so fast?
Many glaciers in Antarctica are
tidewater glaciers—glaciers that rest on the seabed and end with their ice
front in the ocean and calve icebergs. The topography beneath these glaciers is
often varied; they may sit upon deep canyons, underground mountains, or big
flat plains. In Hektoria's case, the glacier rested on top of an ice plain, a
flat area of bedrock below sea level.
Researchers previously found that
15,000–19,000 years ago, Antarctic glaciers with ice plains retreated hundreds
of meters per day, and this helped the team better understand Hektoria's rapid
retreat.
When tidewater glaciers meet the
ocean, they can go afloat, where they float on the ocean's surface rather than
resting on solid ground. The point at which a glacier goes afloat is called the
grounding line. Using several types of satellite data, the researchers
discovered Hektoria had multiple grounding lines, which can indicate a glacier
with ice plain topography underneath.
Hektoria's ice plain caused a large
part of the glacier to go afloat suddenly, causing it to calve quickly. Going
afloat exposed it to ocean forces that opened up crevasses from the bottom of
the glacier, eventually meeting crevasses exposed from the top, causing the
entire glacier to calve and break away.
The
team used satellite data to
study the glacier at different time intervals and created a robust picture of
the glacier, its topography, and its retreat.
"If we only had one image every
three months, we might not be able to tell you that the glacier lost two and a
half kilometers in two days," Ochwat said. "Combining these different
satellites, we can fill in time gaps and confirm how quickly the glacier lost
ice."
The researchers also used seismic
instruments to identify a series of glacier earthquakes at Hektoria that
occurred simultaneously with the rapid retreat period. The earthquakes
confirmed the glacier was grounded on bedrock rather than floating, proving both
the presence of an ice plain topography and that the ice loss contributed
directly to global sea level rise.
Ice plain topographies have been
detected across numerous glaciers in Antarctica, and the research on Hektoria
will help scientists anticipate and forecast potential rapid retreat across the
continent.
"Hektoria's retreat is a bit of a
shock—this kind of lighting-fast retreat really changes what's possible for
other, larger glaciers on the continent," Scambos said. "If the same
conditions set up in some of the other areas, it could greatly speed up sea
level rise from the continent."
Provided by University of Colorado at Boulder
Source: Antarctic glacier retreats faster than any other in modern history, findings show

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