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Related: About this forumCracks herald the calving of a large iceberg from Petermann Glacier
https://www.awi.de/en/about-us/service/press/press-release/cracks-herald-the-calving-of-a-large-iceberg-from-petermann-glacier.htmlCracks herald the calving of a large iceberg from Petermann Glacier
AWI researchers have observed an increased flow speed on the glacier and predict a further acceleration if a calving event occurs
06. February 2019
Cracks in the floating ice tongue of Petermann Glacier in the far northwest reaches of Greenland indicate the pending loss of another large iceberg. As glaciologists from the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) report in a new study, the glaciers flow rate has increased by an average of 10 percent since the calving event in 2012, during which time new cracks have also formed a quite natural process. However, the experts model simulations also show that, if these ice masses truly break off, Petermann Glaciers flow rate will likely accelerate further and transport more ice out to sea, with corresponding effects on the global sea level. The study was recently released in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface and is freely available.
Located in the outermost northwest corner of Greenland, Petermann Glacier is one of the most prominent glaciers in the region: partly because its catchment encompasses four percent of the Greenland Ice Sheet, and partly because it is one of only three glaciers in Greenland with a floating ice tongue. That tongue currently extends roughly 70 kilometres into Petermann Fjord. Cracks 12 kilometres above the previous glacier edge indicate that, in the near future, another major iceberg could calve from Petermann Glacier.
Glaciologists at the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) in Bremerhaven came to this conclusion after analysing satellite imagery of the glacier from the past ten years. The satellite data shows that Petermann Glacier had a flow speed of roughly 1135 metres per year in the winter of 2016. That equates to an acceleration of about 10 percent in comparison to the winter of 2011, and we asked ourselves what was responsible for the increased speed, explains AWI glaciologist and co-author Niklas Neckel.
The researchers subsequently simulated the glaciers observed ice transport in a computer model and were able to confirm that the loss of a large iceberg in August 2012 is what triggered the acceleration. On their way to the sea, the glaciers ice masses rub along the rock walls that enclose the fjord to the left and right. If a major iceberg breaks away from the end of the glaciers tongue, it will reduce the tongues overall length, and with it, the route along which the ice masses scrape against the stone. This in turn limits the walls braking effect, so that the glacier begins flowing faster, explains AWI ice modeller and first author Martin Rückamp.
https://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2018JF004775AWI researchers have observed an increased flow speed on the glacier and predict a further acceleration if a calving event occurs
06. February 2019
Cracks in the floating ice tongue of Petermann Glacier in the far northwest reaches of Greenland indicate the pending loss of another large iceberg. As glaciologists from the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) report in a new study, the glaciers flow rate has increased by an average of 10 percent since the calving event in 2012, during which time new cracks have also formed a quite natural process. However, the experts model simulations also show that, if these ice masses truly break off, Petermann Glaciers flow rate will likely accelerate further and transport more ice out to sea, with corresponding effects on the global sea level. The study was recently released in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface and is freely available.
Located in the outermost northwest corner of Greenland, Petermann Glacier is one of the most prominent glaciers in the region: partly because its catchment encompasses four percent of the Greenland Ice Sheet, and partly because it is one of only three glaciers in Greenland with a floating ice tongue. That tongue currently extends roughly 70 kilometres into Petermann Fjord. Cracks 12 kilometres above the previous glacier edge indicate that, in the near future, another major iceberg could calve from Petermann Glacier.
Glaciologists at the Alfred Wegener Institute, Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) in Bremerhaven came to this conclusion after analysing satellite imagery of the glacier from the past ten years. The satellite data shows that Petermann Glacier had a flow speed of roughly 1135 metres per year in the winter of 2016. That equates to an acceleration of about 10 percent in comparison to the winter of 2011, and we asked ourselves what was responsible for the increased speed, explains AWI glaciologist and co-author Niklas Neckel.
The researchers subsequently simulated the glaciers observed ice transport in a computer model and were able to confirm that the loss of a large iceberg in August 2012 is what triggered the acceleration. On their way to the sea, the glaciers ice masses rub along the rock walls that enclose the fjord to the left and right. If a major iceberg breaks away from the end of the glaciers tongue, it will reduce the tongues overall length, and with it, the route along which the ice masses scrape against the stone. This in turn limits the walls braking effect, so that the glacier begins flowing faster, explains AWI ice modeller and first author Martin Rückamp.
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Cracks herald the calving of a large iceberg from Petermann Glacier (Original Post)
OKIsItJustMe
Feb 2019
OP
Haggis for Breakfast
(6,831 posts)1. Anyone who is STILL a climate denier at this point is deranged.
When people start scuba-diving on Biscayne and Brickell Avenues, canoeing over what was Corpus Christi and surfing down Market Street in San Francisco maybe the repukes will acknowledge what has been BLATANTLY OBVIOUS to everyone for decades.
But then, I'm an optimist.
MLAA
(17,288 posts)2. I think we are screwed.
Not putting of doing things I have wanted to do. I think we all should start living for today the best we can, I dont think the worst species on the planet will be around too much longer. I use to plan to live into my 90s. Now I think we will be lucky to make it another 10 years.
Dead_Parrot
(14,478 posts)3. Party, dude.
Party like there's no tomorrow.
MLAA
(17,288 posts)4. Deal, you too, 🦜