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Antarctic ice shelf potentially stabilized by export of meltwater in surface river

Authors :
A. Boghosian
Indrani Das
Marco Tedesco
Robin E. Bell
Massimo Frezzotti
Winnie C.W. Chu
Kirsty J. Tinto
Jonathan Kingslake
Christopher J. Zappa
Won Sang Lee
Frezzotti, M.
Bell, R. E.
Chu, W.
Kingslake, J.
Das, I.
Tedesco, M.
Tinto, K. J.
Zappa, C. J.
Boghosian, A.
Lee, W. S.
Source :
Nature. 544:344-348
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

Meltwater stored in ponds and crevasses can weaken and fracture ice shelves, triggering their rapid disintegration. This ice-shelf collapse results in an increased flux of ice from adjacent glaciers and ice streams, thereby raising sea level globally. However, surface rivers forming on ice shelves could potentially export stored meltwater and prevent its destructive effects. Here we present evidence for persistent active drainage networks - interconnected streams, ponds and rivers - on the Nansen Ice Shelf in Antarctica that export a large fraction of the ice shelf's meltwater into the ocean. We find that active drainage has exported water off the ice surface through waterfalls and dolines for more than a century. The surface river terminates in a 130-metre-wide waterfall that can export the entire annual surface melt over the course of seven days. During warmer melt seasons, these drainage networks adapt to changing environmental conditions by remaining active for longer and exporting more water. Similar networks are present on the ice shelf in front of Petermann Glacier, Greenland, but other systems, such as on the Larsen C and Amery Ice Shelves, retain surface water at present. The underlying reasons for export versus retention remain unclear. Nonetheless our results suggest that, in a future warming climate, surface rivers could export melt off the large ice shelves surrounding Antarctica - contrary to present Antarctic ice-sheet models, which assume that meltwater is stored on the ice surface where it triggers ice-shelf disintegration. © 2017 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
544
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fa71f3f6b4b930fe73cc5aa37a46a755
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature22048