BEIJING, Jan. 14 (Xinhuanet) -- Vast western
Antarctica ice sheets previously thought to be relatively safe from global
warming appear to be destabilizing because of global warming, researchers
reported Sunday, increasing the threat of faster sea-level rise than current
estimates.
While the overall loss is a tiny fraction of the
miles-deep ice that covers much of Antarctica, scientists said the new finding
is important because the continent holds about 90 percent of Earth's ice, and
until now, large-scale ice loss there had been limited to the peninsula that
juts out toward the tip of South America. In addition, researchers found that
the rate of ice loss in the affected areas has accelerated during the past 10
years -- as it has on most glaciers and ice sheets around the world.
"Without doubt, Antarctica as a whole is now losing
ice yearly, and each year it's losing more," said Eric Rignot, lead author of a
paper published online in the journal Nature Geoscience.
The Antarctic ice sheet is shrinking despite land
temperatures for the continent remaining essentially unchanged, except for the
fast-warming peninsula.
The cause, Rignot said, may be changes in the flow of
the warmer water of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current that circles much of the
continent. Because of changed wind patterns and less-well-understood dynamics of
the submerged current, its water is coming closer to land in some sectors and
melting the edges of glaciers deep underwater.
"Something must be changing the ocean to trigger such
changes," said Rignot, a senior scientist with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
"We believe it is related to global climate forcing."
Rignot said the tonnage of yearly ice loss in
Antarctica is approaching that of Greenland, where ice sheets are known to be
melting rapidly in some parts and where ancient glaciers have been in retreat.
He said the change in Antarctica could become considerably more dramatic because
the continent's western shelf, an expanse of ice and snow roughly the size of
Texas, is largely below sea level and has broad and flat expanses of ice that
could move quickly. Much of Greenland's ice flows through relatively narrow
valleys in mountainous terrain, which slows its motion.
The new finding comes days after the head of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said the group's next report should
look at the "frightening" possibility that ice sheets in Greenland and
Antarctica could melt rapidly at the same time.
(Agencies)