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Scientists say monster iceberg about to break loose

Berlin - The Wilkins Ice Shelf, a monster iceberg more than 100 kilometres across, is about to separate from the Antarctic continent and float free, possibly as a result of global warming, two German scientists said Friday. Rifts have developed in th...
Posted : Fri, 03 Apr 2009 12:47:57 GMT
By : DPA
Category : Environment
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Berlin - The Wilkins Ice Shelf, a monster iceberg more than 100 kilometres across, is about to separate from the Antarctic continent and float free, possibly as a result of global warming, two German scientists said Friday. Rifts have developed in the narrow "ice bridge," which is the last link between the shelf and the Antarctic Peninsula, reported the European Space Agency (ESA), quoting scientists Angelika Humbert and Matthias Braun, who have been observing the ice using satellite photos.

Humbert and Braun have been watching changes in radar images of the ice taken by an ESA satellite, Envisat. Two big chunks of the shelf broke away last year, leaving the ice bridge only 900 metres wide at its narrowest point.

"In the past months, we have observed the ice bridge deforming and its narrowest location acting as a kind of hinge," Humbert said.

"During the last year the ice shelf has lost about 1,800 square kilometres or about 14 per cent of its size."

Antarctica's ice sheet was formed by thousands of years of accumulated and compacted snow. Along the coast the ice gradually floats out onto the sea, forming massive ledges known as ice shelves.

Seven such ice shelves have retreated and disintegrated in the past 20 years. The Wilkins Shelf was stable for most of last century before it began retreating in the 1990s. Scientists are investigating whether unusual warming in the past 50 years is to blame.

The separation of the ice shelf from its land anchors, Charcot Island and Latady Island, would not raise world sea levels because the ice is already floating on the Antarctic Ocean.

Humbert works at the Institute of Geophysics of Muenster University and Braun at the Center for Remote Sensing, University of Bonn.

Copyright DPA

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COMMENT
By: El Mugroso , Sun, 05 Apr 2009 07:19:40 GMT

A big cause for glaciers breaking away is SO MANY BOMBS detonated in Iraq and Afghanistan.


warming
By: RLA , Fri, 03 Apr 2009 18:54:07 GMT

MY, how disappointing it is to so/hear the so called PH'Ds with intelligence ooozing out of their brains that they choose to gather as the ugly duckling shouting that the sky is falling syndrome. when one studies Native American history it clearly reveals the cyclical episodes they noted. Sometimes they suffered dearly while in the opposite they benefited as well as the critters of the world. We are simply in another global adjustment.


Religious Left
By: larrydalooza , Fri, 03 Apr 2009 18:38:58 GMT

I pray to AGW that we overcome the evil CO2. AGW bless America.



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