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West Antarctic Ice Sheets Threatened by Rising Sealevels

by Hannah Punitha on Jun 25 2008 8:42 PM

An Australian researcher has suggested that a rise of about 50 to 100 centimeters above the 1920 sea level, may be enough to threaten the west Antarctic ice sheets.

An Australian researcher has suggested that a rise of about 50 to 100 centimeters above the 1920 sea level, may be enough to threaten the west Antarctic ice sheets.

According to a report in ABC, Dr Bradley Opdyke, a paleoceanographer from the Australia National University (ANU) has determined that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet (WAIS) could partially collapse within 20 years, resulting in a dramatic jump in sea levels.

Opdyke said that the WAIS is inherently unstable, and the current rate of sea level rise is placing it at risk.

"It is pinned on the spines of a few mountains, with ice sheets draped off them," he said. "If sea level rise unpins these sheets, it is plausible that there will be dramatic ice collapse in the West Antarctic," he added.

According to Opdyke, data from deep sea sediment cores suggests that Antarctic ice sheets have collapsed several times in the last 75,000 years.

Some warming periods were probably only decades long, yet may have corresponded to a sea level rise of many metres.

"When ice melts, it tends to melt in a hurry," said Opdyke.

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He believes the WAIS collapse "could take months, even weeks."

By examining conditions during previous events, Opdyke predicted that a sea level rise of 50 to 100 centimetres above the 1920 level may be enough to "unpin" the ice sheets, leading to a collapse of the WAIS.

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"Since 1920, sea levels have risen about 23 centimetres," he said. "We're now experiencing an annual sea level rise of 3.3 millimetres, from alpine and Greenland glacier ice melt and thermal expansion of the oceans," he added.

"In 10 years time, we expect the rise to be over 6 millimetres per year and by 2028, over 1 centimetre per year," said Opdyke.

Professor Malcolm McCulloch, also from the ANU, agrees that a WAIS collapse is a key threat.

"Satellite images have revealed there's already melt-water beneath some of the ice sheets," he said. "If the WAIS collapses, sea levels will rise between four and six metres," he added.

According to McCulloch, the collapse of the WAIS can be averted if the world community becomes "open minded" in its search for alternatives to fossil fuels.

Source-ANI
SPH


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