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oren

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #950 on: July 13, 2024, 02:33:17 PM »
Welcome! I can't answer though.

IceFloe

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #951 on: July 13, 2024, 03:39:40 PM »
Welcome! I can't answer though.

Welcome

I was able to find a study from this year that says penguins are trying to adapt to the loss of sea ice.

https://www.euronews.com/green/2024/01/24/satellite-imagery-reveals-previously-unknown-colonies-of-emperor-penguins-in-antarctica

IceFloe

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #952 on: July 13, 2024, 03:53:43 PM »
The original of that study.
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2023.2067
Researchers estimate that the penguin population is declining by about a percent per year.

vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #953 on: July 13, 2024, 06:07:04 PM »
welcome aboard, IceFloe

Loss of Antarctic sea ice causes catastrophic breeding failure for emperor penguins
https://www.bas.ac.uk/media-post/loss-of-sea-ice-causes-catastrophic-breeding-failure-for-emperor-penguins/



Emperor penguin colonies experienced unprecedented breeding failure in a region of Antarctica where there was total sea ice loss in 2022. The discovery supports predictions that over 90% of emperor penguin colonies will be quasi-extinct by the end of the century, based on current global warming trends.

In a new study published today in Communications Earth & Environment, researchers from British Antarctic Survey discussed the high probability that no chicks had survived from four of the five known emperor penguin colonies in the central and eastern Bellingshausen Sea. The scientists examined satellite images that showed the loss of sea ice at breeding sites, well before chicks would have developed waterproof feathers.

Emperor penguins are dependent on stable sea ice that is firmly attached to the shore ('land-fast' ice) for the majority of the year, from April through to January. Once they arrive at their chosen breeding site, penguins lay eggs in Antarctic winter from May to June. Eggs hatch after 65 days, but chicks do not fledge until summer, between December and January.

At the beginning of December 2022, the Antarctic sea ice extent had matched the previous all-time low set in 2021. The most extreme loss was seen in the central and eastern Bellingshausen Sea region, west of the Antarctic Peninsula where there was a 100% loss of sea ice in November 2022.

"We have never seen emperor penguins fail to breed, at this scale, in a single season. The loss of sea ice in this region during the Antarctic summer made it very unlikely that displaced chicks would survive. ...



Peter T. Fretwell, Aude Boutet,  Norman Ratcliffe, Record low 2022 Antarctic sea ice led to catastrophic breeding failure of emperor penguins, Communications Earth & Environment
https://www.nature.com/articles/s43247-023-00927-x

-------------------------------------------------------

Emperors on thin ice: three years of breeding failure at Halley Bay
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/antarctic-science/article/emperors-on-thin-ice-three-years-of-breeding-failure-at-halley-bay/4CA1A77971A4CD5D5CB823EBF338FAA9#
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IceFloe

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #954 on: July 14, 2024, 02:46:46 PM »
Thanks for the info, vox_mundi. I just read that the ancestors of penguins lived in a warm climate without ice, like many species of modern penguin in Australia and New Zealand. Why then is there a decline in the penguin population? Maybe the reason is not the melting of ice, but the fishing of krill by people, main source of food penguin?

HapHazard

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #955 on: July 17, 2024, 06:39:00 AM »
A rare Stratospheric Warming event has begun over the South Pole, with unusually strong anomalies now developing

link

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kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #956 on: August 01, 2024, 08:42:08 PM »
First map of an ice shelf’s bottom reveals mysterious melt patterns

High-resolution images of the underside of a formation in Antarctica could help researchers to refine projections of sea-level rise.

The first detailed map of the underside of an ice shelf reveals melted areas that have an unexpected shape: teardrops1. The new data, published today in Science Advances, could help researchers to better understand how ice is affected when scoured by ocean currents and might lead to more accurate predictions of sea level rise.

While remote-operated submersibles have ventured under ice shelves, none have produced a fine-resolution ice map before. “It's a little bit like the Holy Grail in Antarctic oceanography,” said Anna Wåhlin, an oceanographer at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden and the first author of the paper. “We had to revise our mental images of the ice completely when we got this data.”

Pings paint a picture
Ice shelves float atop seawater, fed by tributary glaciers on land that are flowing towards the ocean. The new study describes the belly of the Dotson Ice Shelf, a part of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet. Under current projections, the ice sheet could cause an average sea-level rise of 3.2 metres if it were to suddenly collapse2. If Dotson falls away, the land-based glaciers could become destabilized and their flow out to sea could accelerate, Wåhlinand others say.

In 2022, Wåhlin and her colleagues sent a robotic submersible equipped with sonar to map about 20% of the ice shelf. The craft repeatedly fired pings from 450 sonar beams, which echoed off the shelf and back to the submersible as it moved in a lawn mower pattern under the ice for 27 days. The team also measured ocean currents and the temperature and salinity of the water below.

The researchers discovered more than 75 unprecedented teardrop shapes carved into the bottom of the ice shelf, ranging from 20 to 300 metres long and averaging 14 metres deep. The teardrops were observed only on the western side of the shelf. That portion of the shelf is thinner and is battered by faster currents than the shelf’s eastern side.

The authors hypothesize that friction between the ice and ocean surface and the water’s circulation might create a spiral of water that accelerates melting to create these teardrop shapes, which the researchers called “enigmatic”. But repeat observations are necessary to confirm this idea, Wåhlin says.

“These results are really important because the Antarctic ice sheet is changing rapidly,” said Hélène Seroussi, a glaciologist at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, who was not involved in the study. Changing ocean conditions can accelerate melting, but most studies quantifying the melt rate are limited by indirect observations such as remote sensing, she says.

...

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-02501-7


Paper:

Swirls and scoops: Ice base melt revealed by multibeam imagery of an Antarctic ice shelf

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adn9188
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #957 on: August 10, 2024, 06:50:09 AM »
The Antarctic’s Polar Vortex Could Be About to Split In Two
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2443183-the-antarctics-polar-vortex-could-be-about-to-split-in-two/

A split in the southern vortex – not seen since 2002 – could lead to sudden warming of the Antarctic stratosphere and hotter weather in Australia and South America
There are 3 classes of people: those who see. Those who see when they are shown. Those who do not see

Insensible before the wave so soon released by callous fate. Affected most, they understand the least, and understanding, when it comes, invariably arrives too late

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morganism

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #958 on: August 20, 2024, 12:08:06 AM »
One of Earth's Continents Is Rising Up, And The Effects Could Be Huge

Antarctica is shedding weight, allowing the continent to rise from the ocean somewhat like a once-squished sponge now free to expand again.

That weight is its ice.

The process is called post-glacial uplift, and new research suggests it will have a massive impact on future global sea level rise. It could reduce Antarctica's contribution by up to 40 percent, or it could make things far worse, depending on how much heat-trapping, ice-melting fossil fuels we continue to let loose.

"With nearly 700 million people living in coastal areas and the potential cost of sea-level rise reaching trillions of dollars by the end of the century, understanding the domino effect of Antarctic ice melt is crucial," says McGill University glaciologist Natalya Gomez.

And in the last few years, Antarctic ice has remained stubbornly low.

Gomez and colleagues examined Earth's mantle beneath the Antarctic ice sheet and found it particularly squishy in some key areas. The seismic data revealed that this high level of viscosity is creating the unexpectedly fast rise of the land.

"Our measurements show that the solid earth that forms the base of the Antarctic ice sheet is changing shape surprisingly quickly," says Ohio State University geologist Terry Wilson.

"The land uplift from reduced ice on the surface is happening in decades, rather than over thousands of years."

The team then used 3D modeling to simulate sea level rise due to Antarctica's changing landmass across different scenarios. If warming levels are kept low, it contributes to sea levels gaining up to 1.7 meters (5.6 feet) by 2500, but this blows out to as high as 19.5 meters if we continue to allow global warming to increase unabated.

This is because when the ice sheet retreat outpaces the uplift, more water ends up being expelled into the oceans. But if we manage to slow down this melt, the rising land will lift some of the ice away from warmer ocean waters, allowing it to be preserved for longer.

"This study marks a breakthrough in our ability to better predict the impacts of climate change on rising seas and to inform effective environmental policy," says University of Massachusetts glaciologist Rob DeConto.
(more background)

https://www.sciencealert.com/one-of-earths-continents-is-rising-up-and-the-effects-could-be-huge
....

The influence of realistic 3D mantle viscosity on Antarctica’s contribution to future global sea levels

The response of the Antarctic Ice Sheet (AIS) to climate change is the largest uncertainty in projecting future sea level. The impact of three-dimensional (3D) Earth structure on the AIS and future global sea levels is assessed here by coupling a global glacial isostatic adjustment model incorporating 3D Earth structure to a dynamic ice-sheet model. We show that including 3D viscous effects produces rapid uplift in marine sectors and reduces projected ice loss for low greenhouse gas emission scenarios, lowering Antarctica’s contribution to global sea level in the coming centuries by up to ~40%. Under high-emission scenarios, ice retreat outpaces uplift, and sea-level rise is amplified by water expulsion from Antarctic marine areas.

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adn1470
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kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #959 on: September 05, 2024, 05:37:25 PM »
How Earth’s Most Intense Heat Wave Ever Impacted Life In Antarctica

In a study published in the journal Earth’s Future, scientists, including researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder, revealed how heat waves, especially those occurring in Antarctica’s cold seasons, may impact the animals living there. The research illustrates how extreme weather events intensified by climate change could have profound implications for the continent’s fragile ecosystems.

In March 2022, the most intense heat wave ever recorded on Earth hit Antarctica, just as organisms in the southern region braced themselves for the long, harsh winter ahead. The extreme weather raised temperatures in parts of Antarctica to more than 70°F above average, melting glaciers and snow even in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, one of the planet’s coldest and driest regions. 

As part of a Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) project in Antarctica, the research team found that the unexpected melt followed by a rapid refreeze likely disrupted the life cycles of many organisms and killed a large swath of some invertebrates in the McMurdo Dry Valleys.

“It’s important that we pay attention to these signals, even if they’re coming from microscopic organisms in soils in a polar desert,” said Michael Gooseff, the paper’s senior author and professor in the Department of Civil, Environment and Architectural Engineering at CU Boulder. “They’re the early responders to changes that could cascade up to larger organisms, the landscape and even us, far away from Antarctica.”

...

In 2022, all members of the polar expedition team left the continent in February, before the Antarctic summer ended. A month later, Antarctica experienced the most extreme heat wave on record, driven by an intense storm known as an atmospheric river, which transported moist air over long distances to the polar region.

The team’s sensors in the McMurdo Dry Valleys recorded air temperatures, which typically hover around -4°F in March, rising above freezing and exceeding the average by 45°F.

Satellite imagery and stream discharge measurements showed that the sudden warming wetted the valleys’ soil more than two months after the peak summer thaw, at a time when the land is typically dry.

In two days, after the heat wave passed, temperatures plummeted and the soil froze. This event happened during a critical transition period, when organisms hunker down and get ready for the dark, cold winter. Gooseff and his colleagues were curious about how animals in the valleys responded.

“These animals invest a significant amount of energy in preparing and shutting down for the winter,” said Gooseff.  “When things start to warm up the following summer, they use energy to become active again. One of our major concerns with unusual weather events like this heat wave is that these animals might start using a lot more energy, thinking it’s summer, only to have to shut down again two days later. How many times can they go through that cycle before they exhaust their energy reserves?”

He and the team returned to Antarctica the following summer, in December 2022. They sampled the soil and compared organisms living in areas that became wet to those that stayed dry during the heat wave.

They observed a 50% decrease in the population of Scottnema, a common roundworm, in areas that got wet. Scottnema is adapted to extremely cold and dry climates.

“The heat wave made the environment appear warm enough for things to get wet, creating a false start to summer. Some of the biology responding to these temperatures might be seriously disrupted by this,” Gooseff said.

more:
https://www.eurasiareview.com/05092024-how-earths-most-intense-heat-wave-ever-impacted-life-in-antarctica/
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #960 on: September 12, 2024, 09:47:18 PM »
Rapid Loss of Antarctic Ice After 2100 Likely Under Current Emissions, Climate Scientists Find
https://phys.org/news/2024-09-rapid-loss-antarctic-ice-current.html



A Dartmouth-led study by more than 50 climate scientists worldwide provides the first clear projection of how carbon emissions may drive the loss of Antarctica's ice sheet over the next 300 years.

The future of Antarctica's glaciers after 2100 becomes uncertain when looking at existing ice-sheet models individually, the researchers report in the journal Earth's Future. They combined data from 16 ice-sheet models and found that collectively, the projections agree that ice loss from Antarctica will increase, but gradually, through the 21st century, even under current carbon emissions.

But that consistency falls off a cliff after 2100, the researchers found. The models predict that under current emissions, ice in most of Antarctica's western basins begins to retreat rapidly. By 2200, the melting glaciers could increase global sea levels by as much as 5.5 feet. Some of the team's numerical experiments projected a near-total collapse of the Antarctic ice sheet by 2300.

"While current carbon emissions have only a modest impact on model projections for this century, the difference between how high- and low-emission scenarios contribute to sea-level rise grows sharply after 2100," Morlighem says. "These results confirm that it is critical to cut carbon emissions now to protect future generations."

The timing of when Antarctica's glaciers would start retreating varied with the ice-flow model the researchers used, Seroussi says. But the speed with which large retreats occurred once a rapid loss of ice began was consistent among the models.

Quote
... "All the models agree that once these large changes are initiated, nothing can stop them or slow them down. Several basins in West Antarctica could experience a complete collapse before 2200" ...

"The exact timing of such collapses remains unknown and depends on future greenhouse gas emissions, so we need to respond quickly enough to reduce emissions before the major basins in Antarctica are lost."

Hélène Seroussi et al, Evolution of the Antarctic Ice Sheet Over the Next Three Centuries From an ISMIP6 Model Ensemble, Earth's Future (2024)
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2024EF004561
There are 3 classes of people: those who see. Those who see when they are shown. Those who do not see

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Freegrass

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #961 on: October 08, 2024, 11:10:50 AM »
When both Antarctica and the Sahara are turning green, while the Amazon is on fire, it's time to wake up.

Antarctica is ‘greening’ at dramatic rate as climate heats

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/oct/04/antarctic-plant-cover-growing-at-dramatic-rate-as-climate-heats

Plant cover across the Antarctic peninsula has soared more than tenfold over the last few decades, as the climate crisis heats up the icy continent.

Analysis of satellite data found there was less than one sq kilometre of vegetation in 1986 but there was almost 12km2 of green cover by 2021. The spread of the plants, mostly mosses, has accelerated since 2016, the researchers found.

The growth of vegetation on a continent dominated by ice and bare rock is a sign of the reach of global heating into the Antarctic, which is warming faster than the global average. The scientists warned that this spread could provide a foothold for alien invasive species into the pristine Antarctic ecosystem.

Greening has also been reported in the Arctic, and in 2021 rain, not snow, fell on the summit of Greenland’s huge ice cap for the first time on record.

“The Antarctic landscape is still almost entirely dominated by snow, ice and rock, with only a tiny fraction colonised by plant life,” said Dr Thomas Roland, at the University of Exeter, UK, and who co-led the study. “But that tiny fraction has grown dramatically – showing that even this vast and isolated wilderness is being affected by human-caused climate change.” The peninsula is about 500,000km2 in total.

Roland warned that future heating, which will continue until carbon emissions are halted, could bring “fundamental changes to the biology and landscape of this iconic and vulnerable region”. The study is published in the journal Nature Geoscience and based on analysis of Landsat images.

Prof Andrew Shepherd, at Northumbria University, UK, and not part of the study team, said: “This is a very interesting study and tallies with what I found when I visited Larsen Inlet [on the peninsula] a couple of years ago. We landed on a beach that was buried beneath the Larsen Ice Shelf until the shelf collapsed in 1986-88. We found it to now have a river with green algae growing in it!”

“This place had been hidden from the atmosphere for thousands of years and was colonised by plants within a couple of decades of it becoming ice free – it’s astonishing really,” he said. “It’s a barometer of climate change but also a tipping point for the region as life now has a foothold there.”

The acceleration in the spread of the mosses from 2016 coincides with the start of a marked decrease in sea ice extent around Antarctica. Warmer open seas may be leading to wetter conditions that favour plant growth, the researchers said. Mosses can colonise bare rock and create the foundation of soils that, along with the milder conditions, could allow other plants to grow.

Dr Olly Bartlett, at the University of Hertfordshire and also co-leader of the new study, said: “Soil in Antarctica is mostly poor or nonexistent, but this increase in plant life will add organic matter, and facilitate soil formation. This raises the risk of non-native and invasive species arriving, possibly carried by eco-tourists, scientists or other visitors to the continent.”

A study in 2017 showed the rate of moss growth was increasing but it did not assess the area covered. Another study, in 2022, showed that Antarctica’s two native flowering plants were spreading on Signy Island, to the north of the Antarctic peninsula.

Green algae is also blooming across the surface of the melting snow on the peninsula. Trees were growing at the south pole a few million years ago, when the planet last had as much CO2 in the atmosphere as it does today.
Keep 'em stupid, and they'll die for you.

kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #962 on: October 11, 2024, 05:18:42 PM »
Slushy Snow Affects Antarctic Ice Melt

More than a tenth of Antarctica’s ice projects out over the sea; this ice shelf preserves glacial ice that would otherwise fall into the Southern Ocean and raise global sea levels. But austral summers eat away at the ice, leaving meltwater collected in ponds (visible above in bright blue) and in harder-to-spot slush. Researchers taught a machine-learning algorithm to identify slush and ponds in satellite images, then used the algorithm to analyze nine years’ worth of imagery.

The group found that slush makes up about 57% of the overall meltwater. It is also darker than pure snow, absorbing more sunlight and leading to more melting. Many climate models currently neglect slush, and the authors warn that, without it, models will underestimate how much the ice is melting and predict that the ice is more stable than it truly is.

https://fyfluiddynamics.com/2024/10/slushy-snow-affects-antarctic-ice-melt/

Substantial contribution of slush to meltwater area across Antarctic ice shelves
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-024-01466-6
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #963 on: December 04, 2024, 05:02:21 PM »
Antarctica's Conger Ice Shelf Was Weakening for Decades Before Collapse, Scientists Find
https://phys.org/news/2024-12-antarctica-conger-ice-shelf-weakening.html

An international team of oceanographers, Antarctic specialists and meteorologists has found evidence that the collapse of Antarctica's Conger ice shelf in 2022 was due to ice melting and weakening that had progressed for decades.

In their study, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, the group analyzed archival satellite imagery of the area prior to the collapse. Karen Alley with the University of Manitoba has published a News & Views piece in the same journal issue, outlining the work by the team on this new effort and explaining why the collapse of the shelf was so alarming to climate scientists.

In 2022, when Antarctica's Conger-Glenzer Ice Shelf separated from Bowman Island, it was not even noticed for several weeks, until one of the researchers from this new study happened to look at a satellite image of the region. The reason it went unnoticed was no one expected it to separate.

Typically, when an ice shelf is about to break loose, water appears on the surface, evidence of melting. But no water had accumulated on the Conger-Glenzer Ice Shelf, suggesting its separation was different from others in the past.

... The reason researchers had not seen water on top of the ice shelf was it was melting from the bottom—conditions in the eastern parts of Antarctica were still cold enough to prevent the top from melting.

As Alley explains, the reason the Conger-Glenzer Ice Shelf collapse is so concerning is it suggests that East Antarctica ice sheets and shelves may be much closer to melting than previously suspected. And this is important because the amount of ice in the east is far greater than the west, which is where warmer temperatures have been melting top ice. If the ice shelves in the east are melting from below, it could lead to drastically higher ocean levels across the globe.



Catherine C. Walker et al, Multi-decadal collapse of East Antarctica's Conger–Glenzer Ice Shelf, Nature Geoscience (2024)
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-024-01582-3

Karen E. Alley, Ice-shelf disintegration in East Antarctica, Nature Geoscience (2024)
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41561-024-01607-x
There are 3 classes of people: those who see. Those who see when they are shown. Those who do not see

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kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #964 on: December 05, 2024, 09:59:12 AM »
Since it is unlikely that this is the only one to melt this once again fattens the tail of climate risk. Now we wait for the next similar events from the region...
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Chris83

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #965 on: December 08, 2024, 09:04:09 AM »
Climate models would be able to forecast sea ice coverage in Antarctica, months in advance.   (linked to wind patterns)
New study on the topic.

https://phys.org/news/2024-12-antarctic-sea-ice-months-patterns.html

kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #966 on: December 15, 2024, 05:56:39 PM »
Antarctica's irregular heartbeat shows signs of rapid melting

Periods of sudden melting in the Antarctic ice sheet have been unearthed in a new climate record from over 20 million years ago by geoscientists led by the University of Leicester and the University of Southampton.

Published in the journal Nature Communications, the new study reveals how sensitive our planet's early ice ages were to the effect of the Earth's eccentric orbit around the Sun, suggesting the Antarctic ice sheet is less stable than has been assumed.

It also provides a glimpse of how the Antarctic may behave in a world without the Greenland Ice Sheet, which will melt if emissions continue unabated.

Records show that the Antarctic ice sheet has varied in size throughout its history. These variations in size occur regularly, just like a heartbeat. Existing records from different places in the ocean show different 'rhythms' in the heartbeat of early Antarctic ice ages. This should not be possible because the imprint of the waxing and waning of the Antarctic ice sheet on the climate record should be identical everywhere in the ocean, just as it should not be possible that your leg has a different pulse rate than your arm.

These heartbeat rhythms are caused by the shape of Earth's orbit around the Sun over the course of hundreds of thousands to millions of years. On a more eccentric orbit, the Earth's distance from the Sun will vary more throughout the year, exposing it to more heat when it is close in, and less when it is further away. The increasing heat changes Earth's climate system, causing the ice sheet to melt, sometimes rapidly. When the Earth's orbit is more circular, the ice sheet is more stable and less melting occurs.

This new study, funded by UK Research and Innovation/Natural Environment Research Council and the German Science Foundation (DFG) examines the period between 28 and 20 million years ago, when Earth was warmer than today and only the Antarctic ice sheets existed. Using data obtained from geological cores recovered by an expedition of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP), the research presents a new benchmark climate record to compare existing records to help scientists improve the accuracy of their climate models reconstructing past climate change. These insights into the past help them understand the impact of the melting of the Antarctic Ice Sheet in the future.

Lead author Dr Tim van Peer, from the University of Leicester School of Geography, Geology and the Environment, said: "From our research, we can see that the Antarctic ice sheet is more unstable than previously thought. We demonstrate how sensitive the geologically early Antarctic ice sheet was to changes in Earth's orbit and axis.

"Past climate changes rapidly ended some of the early Antarctic ice ages and caused large amounts of melt. 'Rapidly' is on geological time scales, not as rapid as we can expect to happen during modern climate change.

"We cannot assume that the modern-day Antarctic ice sheet is stable. If climate emissions continue unabated, we are on course to melt a large amount of the Antarctic ice sheet. We need to mitigate climate change by reducing our emissions. This is the only way to not cross tipping points in the stability of the Antarctic ice sheet."

The research analysed samples from geological cores obtained from the northwest Atlantic Ocean as part of an IODP expedition in 2012. Microorganisms from these cores record the chemistry of the ocean in the form of oxygen isotopes in their shells. By measuring the oxygen isotope ratio, the scientists can work out if the ice sheet has grown or shrunk, and establish a timeline from the depth of that sample in the cores.

Professor Paul Wilson, Principal Investigator on the project at the University of Southampton, said: "It may be a surprising thing to learn that we take the pulse of the Antarctic ice sheet by doing some simple chemistry on pinhead-sized fossil shells from the deep sea floor on the other side of the world. But the really beautiful thing is that we can do it back through the geological record over tens of millions of years. Earth science is about time travel into the past and we are always learning lessons to help us understand our future"

...

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/12/241210115107.htm
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Renerpho

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #967 on: December 15, 2024, 07:16:58 PM »
Antarctica's irregular heartbeat shows signs of rapid melting

I'm always amazed how long it can take to get that stuff through the mill that is the peer-review process. I mean, should we wish a "happy belated birthday"?
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-024-54186-1
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #968 on: December 17, 2024, 11:38:50 PM »
Antarctica's Tipping Points Threaten Global Climate Stability
https://phys.org/news/2024-12-antarctica-threaten-global-climate-stability.html

Antarctica is approaching a series of cascading tipping points that could reshape ecosystems and intensify global climate disruptions, according to a new study by an international team of scientists, including researchers from the University of Tasmania.

The study identifies eight potential tipping points spanning physical, biological, chemical, and governance systems. The research is published in the journal Ambio.

These include collapsing ice sheets, invasive species, ocean acidification, and pressures on the Antarctic Treaty System (ATS), which oversees human activity in the region.

The study warns that these tipping points are interconnected, creating a risk of cascading effects.

Melting ice sheets, for example, not only contribute to sea-level rise but also disrupt ocean circulation, which is crucial for transporting heat, carbon, and nutrients around the globe. Such disruptions threaten marine ecosystems, global fisheries, and food security.

... Biodiversity is another key concern highlighted in the report. Rising temperatures and human activities are enabling invasive species to establish themselves, threatening endemic Antarctic organisms.

At the same time, the Southern Ocean's ability to absorb carbon dioxide—a crucial buffer against global warming—is diminishing.

"The interconnected nature of these systems means small failures can quickly escalate," Professor King said. "Without decisive action, we risk triggering a chain reaction with far-reaching and irreversible consequences."

Ida Kubiszewski et al, Cascading tipping points of Antarctica and the Southern Ocean, Ambio (2024
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13280-024-02101-9
There are 3 classes of people: those who see. Those who see when they are shown. Those who do not see

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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #969 on: December 18, 2024, 07:52:22 PM »
Melting Sea Ice In Antarctica Causes Ocean Storms, Scientists Say
https://phys.org/news/2024-12-sea-ice-antarctica-ocean-storms.html

The record-breaking retreat of Antarctic sea ice in 2023 has led to more frequent storms over newly exposed parts of the Southern Ocean, according to a study published Wednesday.

Scientists know that the loss of Antarctic sea ice can diminish penguin numbers, cause ice shelves to melt in warmer waters, and impede the Southern Ocean from absorbing carbon dioxide.

But this new research, published in the peer-reviewed journal Nature, explores another consequence: increased heat loss from the ocean to the atmosphere, and an associated rise in storms.

Using satellite imagery, ocean and atmospheric data, and wind and temperature measurements, they found some newly ice-free areas experienced double the heat loss compared to a stabler period before 2015.

"In the sea-ice-decline regions, the June–July storm frequency has increased by up to 7 days per month in 2023 relative to 1990–2015."

The loss of heat caused by reduced sea ice could have implications for how the ocean circulates and the wider climate system, the study added.

Simon A. Josey et al, Record-low Antarctic sea ice in 2023 increased ocean heat loss and storms, Nature (2024)
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-08368-y
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vox_mundi

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #970 on: January 06, 2025, 05:33:37 PM »
Antarctic Ice Melt May Fuel Eruptions of Hidden Volcanoes
https://phys.org/news/2025-01-antarctic-ice-fuel-eruptions-hidden.html

Climate change is causing the ice sheet to melt, raising global sea levels. The melting is also removing the weight over the rocks below, with more local consequences. Ice sheet melt has been shown to increase volcanic activity in subglacial volcanoes elsewhere on the globe.

A. N. Coonin and colleagues ran 4,000 computer simulations to study how ice sheet loss affects Antarctica's buried volcanoes, and they found that gradual melt could increase the number and size of subglacial eruptions. The findings are published in the journal Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems.

Eruptions of subglacial volcanoes may not be visible on the surface, but they can have consequences for the ice sheet. Heat from these eruptions can increase ice melting deep below the surface and weaken the overlying ice sheet—potentially leading to a feedback loop of reduced pressure from the surface and further volcanic eruptions.

A. N. Coonin et al, Magma Chamber Response to Ice Unloading: Applications to Volcanism in the West Antarctic Rift System, Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (2024)
https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2024GC011743
There are 3 classes of people: those who see. Those who see when they are shown. Those who do not see

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morganism

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #971 on: January 12, 2025, 12:17:26 AM »
Scientists drill nearly 2 miles down to pull 1.2 million-year-old ice core from Antarctic

An international team of scientists announced Thursday they’ve successfully drilled one of the oldest ice cores yet, penetrating nearly 2 miles (2.8 kilometers) to Antarctic bedrock to reach ice they say is at least 1.2 million years old.

Analysis of the ancient ice is expected to show how Earth’s atmosphere and climate have evolved. That should provide insight into how Ice Age cycles have changed, and may help in understanding how atmospheric carbon changed climate, they said.

“Thanks to the ice core we will understand what has changed in terms of greenhouse gases, chemicals and dusts in the atmosphere,” said Carlo Barbante, an Italian glaciologist and coordinator of Beyond EPICA, the project to obtain the core. Barbante also directs the Polar Science Institute at Italy’s National Research Council.

The same team previously drilled a core about 800,000 years old. The latest drilling went 2.8 kilometers (about 1.7 miles) deep, with a team of 16 scientists and support personnel drilling each summer over four years in average temperatures of about minus-35 Celsius (minus-25.6 Fahrenheit).

“It was a great a moment for us when we reached the bedrock,” Scoto said. Isotope analysis gave the ice’s age as at least 1.2 million years old, he said.

Both Barbante and Scoto said that thanks to the analysis of the ice core of the previous Epica campaign they have assessed that concentrations of greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide and methane, even during the warmest periods of the last 800,000 years, have never exceeded the levels seen since the Industrial Revolution began.

“Today we are seeing carbon dioxide levels that are 50% above the highest levels we’ve had over the last 800,000 years,” Barbante said.
(fin)

https://apnews.com/article/antarctica-old-ice-core-climate-change-epica-6f76c57abf254dd9cb698f767db5507b
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kassy

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #972 on: January 19, 2025, 06:31:37 PM »
How is Antarctica melting, exactly? Crucial details are beginning to come into focus


The size of the Antarctic ice sheet can be hard to comprehend. Two kilometres thick on average and covering nearly twice the area of Australia, the ice sheet holds enough freshwater to raise global sea levels by 58 metres.

Ice loss from this sheet is projected to be the leading driver of sea level rise by 2100, yet its contribution remains highly uncertain. While sea levels are certain to rise this century, projections of the contribution from Antarctic ice vary from a 44 cm rise to a 22 cm fall.

Much of this uncertainty is because the ocean processes that control the fate of the sheet occur on an incredibly small scale and are very difficult to measure and model.

But recently scientists have made significant progress in understanding this “ice-ocean boundary layer”. This progress is the subject of our new review paper, published today in Annual Reviews.

Shrinking, thinning and retreating
At the margins of the Antarctic ice sheet, glaciers flow into the Southern Ocean, forming floating ice shelves. These ice shelves act as keystones, stabilising the ice sheet. They’re also shrinking.

The ocean melts ice shelves from below – a process known as “basal melting”. Increased basal melting has led to the thinning and retreat of the ice sheet in some regions, raising global sea levels.

It has also slowed the deepest current in the global overturning circulation, a system of ocean currents that circulates water around the globe.

Like the glaciers that feed them, ice shelves are immense. Yet the ocean processes that control basal melting, and the fate of the entire Antarctic ice sheet, occur on the scale of millimetres. They happen in a thin layer of ocean, just beneath the ice.

The boundary layer between the ice shelf and the ocean is cold, miles from anywhere, and beneath very thick ice, so it’s no wonder it has hardly been measured at all.

Studying this layer with other techniques such as computer simulations is also a huge challenge. Until recently, the tiny motions within the ice-ocean boundary layer put accurate modelling of ice melt out of reach.

These twin challenges have long stymied efforts to answer the deceptively simple question: “How does the ocean melt Antarctic ice shelves?”

Modelling the micro-scale
Computer simulations of ocean processes aren’t new.

But only recently have simulations of the ice-ocean boundary layer become feasible, as computing resources grow and the cost of using them shrinks.

Several research groups around the world have taken on this problem, modelling the micro-scale ocean flow that supplies heat to the ice for melting.

Researchers are looking for a relationship between what the ocean is doing, and how quickly the ice melts. So far, they’ve uncovered not just one relationship but several, each indicating a different melt “regime”. Ocean conditions (temperature, salt content and the speed of ocean currents) and the shape of the ice determine which melting regime applies.

Ice sheet shape is key because meltwater is fresh and lighter than the surrounding ocean. Like hot air collecting at the top of a room, fresh, cold meltwater collects in hollows in the lower surface of the ice sheet, insulating the ice from the ocean water below and slowing melting.

For steeply sloping ice, the insulating effect is much less. The energetic flow of meltwater as it rises under steep ice leads to mixing with the warmer ocean waters. This increases melting.

Fast ocean currents have a similar effect, as they transfer heat to the ice.

Sonar-fitted robots
Recently, ocean robots, including autonomous underwater vehicles and tethered probes deployed by drilling through the ice, have provided unprecedented amounts of data on the environment beneath ice shelves.

Using sonar and cameras, these robots have revealed a weird and wonderful “icescape” on the underside of ice shelves.

This icescape is made of many different ice features, ranging from centimetres to kilometres in size. Some, like steep-sided crevasses, are formed by ice fracturing. Others, like dimpled depressions in the ice (often called “scallops”), stair-like “terraces”, mussel-shaped “scoops”, and larger basal channels, are thought to be formed by melt processes.

Our new knowledge of melting from computer simulations and robots sheds light on these features and how they form. The existence of melt regimes helps explain the evolution of steep-sided terraces, or why different features appear in distinct parts of an ice shelf.

For instance, in the warm, calm eastern part of the Dotson ice shelf in west Antarctica, an autonomous robot observed basal terraces. In the west of Dotson – which experiences cold, fast currents – large mussel-shaped scoops were discovered.

Uncertainties remain
Exactly how some of these features form is still unknown.

New simulations that allow the ice-water boundary to move in time show the “self-sculpting” behaviour of ice melt. This is similar to how dunes form and move in a desert.

However, new computer models are needed to simulate the formation and evolution of the whole icescape.

Some of the recent advances highlighted here are helping to reduce the uncertainty in our understanding of the contribution of the Antarctic ice sheet to global sea level rise.

However, incorporating our new understanding of basal melt, and the dynamic icescape it forms, into climate and ice sheet models still presents a huge challenge.

Overcoming this challenge is urgent. Accurate representation of melt in climate and ice sheet models will reduce the deep uncertainty in sea level rise projections, especially as ocean conditions – and ice shelf melt regimes – shift into the future.

https://theconversation.com/how-is-antarctica-melting-exactly-crucial-details-are-beginning-to-come-into-focus-245660
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John_the_Younger

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Re: What's new in Antarctica ?
« Reply #973 on: January 27, 2025, 05:28:07 PM »

Antarctica: Historic Drilling Campaign Reaches more than 1.2-Million-Year-Old Ice

Quote
The fourth Antarctic campaign of the “Beyond EPICA - Oldest Ice” project, funded by the European Commission, has achieved a historic milestone for climate science. An international team of scientists with participation of the University of Bern successfully drilled a 2,800-meter-long and over 1.2 million years old ice core, reaching the bedrock beneath the Antarctic ice sheet.
The previous 'oldest Antarctic ice' was 800,000 years old, so this is a big deal.