Sunday, March 01, 2020

Ice free waters in the circumpolar circulation around Antarctica is a clear sign of decline of the climate supporting Earth's ice caps.

Just because there are scientists taking advantage of ice free waters doesn't mean it is a good sign of Earth's ice caps. Scientists frequently exploit unusual episodes in time. An example of a measurement of air pollution and CO2 emissions occurred after September 11, 2001. There were measurements made of all kinds of emissions for the three days when no jets were flying after the terrorist attacks on New York, Pennsylvania and Washington, DC.

It is unfortunate scientists have to exploit ice free waters when they are the ones that have warned of it the entire time and went unheeded. These measures of the Thwaites Glacier were never supposed to be necessary.


20 February 2020
By Jeff Tollefsen

Taking advantage of rare ice-free waters in West Antarctica last February, (click here) scientists got their first look underneath Thwaites Glacier, a massive and increasingly unstable formation perched at the edge of the continent. What they saw only increased fears of a collapse that could raise global sea levels by more than half a metre. Data gathered by a robotic submarine deployed by scientists with the International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration suggest that warm water from the deep ocean is welling up from three directions and mixing underneath the ice.

“Thwaites has got these three guns pointed right at it,” says Erin Pettit, a glaciologist at Oregon State University in Corvallis and a co-leader of the five-year, US$50-million project to assess the glacier’s stability. “There is warm water coming from all directions.” She presented initial results from the first two years of the project this week at the American Geophysical Union’s ocean science meeting in San Diego, California.

The warm currents could further destabilize the glacier, which is as large as the island of Great Britain and holds enough ice to boost global sea levels by an estimated 65 centimetres (see 'A precarious position'). If it collapses, Thwaites could take other parts of the western Antarctic ice sheet with it and become the single largest driver of sea-level-rise this century....