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Humans to blame, say scientists
17/10/2006 10:49  - (SA)  

  • Earth's ticking 'time bomb'
  • Earth's ticking 'time bomb'
  • Arctic ice shelf breaks up
  • Antarctic ice shelf collapses
  • Oslo - Scientists said on Monday that they had found the first direct evidence linking the collapse of an ice shelf in Antarctica to global warming widely blamed on human activities.

    Shifts in winds whipping around the southern Ocean, tied to human emissions of greenhouse gases, had warmed the Antarctic peninsula jutting up towards South America and contributed to the break-up of the Larsen B ice shelf in 2002, they said.

    "This is the first time that anyone has been able to demonstrate a physical process directly linking the break-up of the Larsen Ice Shelf to human activity," said Gareth Marshall, lead author of the study at the British Antarctic Survey.

    The chunk that collapsed into the Weddell Sea in 2002 was 3 250 sq kms, bigger than Luxembourg or the US state of Rhode Island.

    Most climate experts say greenhouse gases, mainly from fossil fuels burnt in power plants, factories and cars, are warming the globe and could bring more erosion, floods or rising seas. They are wary of linking individual events - such as a heatwave or a storm - to warming.

    But the British and Belgian scientists, writing in the Journal of Climate, said there was evidence that global warming and a thinning of the ozone layer over Antarctica, caused by human chemicals, had strengthened winds blowing clockwise around Antarctica.

    The Antarctic peninsula's chain of mountains, about 2 000 metres high, used to shield the Larsen ice shelf on its eastern side from the warmer winds.

    "If the westerlies strengthen the number of times that the warm air gets over the mountain barrier increases quite dramatically," John King, a co-author of the study at the British Antarctic Survey, said.

    King said temperature records in Antarctica went back only about 50 years but that there was evidence from sediments on the seabed - which differ if covered by ice or open water - that the Larsen ice shelf had been in place for 5 000 years.

    "Further south on the main Antarctic continent temperatures are pretty stable," he said. "There is no clear direct evidence of human activity affecting the main area."

    The collapse of the Larsen B ice shelf did not raise world sea levels because the ice was floating. A brimful glass of water with an ice cube jutting out will not spill if it melts because ice contracts as it melts.

    But King said the removal of the floating ice barrier could accelerate the flow of land-based glaciers towards the sea, at least in the short term. That extra ice could raise sea levels.

     
     



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