Antarctica ice melting increased by 280 per cent in last 16 years

Press Trust of India  |  Los Angeles 

Yearly loss of ice from has increased by an alarming rate of 280 per cent between 2001 and 2017, according to a study which showed that accelerated melting caused global sea levels to rise more than half an inch in the last four decades.

From 2009 to 2017, about 252 gigatonnes per year were lost.

The pace of melting rose dramatically over the four-decade period. From 1979 to 2001, it was an average of 48 gigatonnes annually per decade. The rate jumped 280 per cent to 134 gigatonnes for 2001 to 2017.

For the study published in journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers conducted the longest-ever assessment of remaining ice mass.

Spanning four decades, the project was also geographically comprehensive; the research team examined 18 regions encompassing 176 basins, as well as surrounding islands.

"As the ice sheet continues to melt away, we expect multi-metre from in the coming centuries," said Eric Rignot, at the University of California, in the US.

Techniques used to estimate ice sheet balance included a comparison of snowfall accumulation in interior basins with ice discharge by glaciers at their grounding lines, where ice begins to float in the ocean and detach from the bed.

Data was derived from fairly high-resolution aerial photographs taken from a distance of about 350 meters via NASA's Operation IceBridge; from multiple space agencies; and the ongoing Landsat satellite imagery series, begun in the early 1970s.

Rignot said that one of the key findings of the project is the contribution has made to the total ice mass loss picture in recent decades.

"The Wilkes Land sector of has, overall, always been an important participant in the mass loss, even as far back as the 1980s, as our research has shown," he said.

"This region is probably more sensitive to than has traditionally been assumed, and that's important to know, because it holds even more ice than and the Peninsula together," he added.

The sectors losing the most ice mass are adjacent to warm ocean waterm researchers said.

"As climate warming and ozone depletion send more ocean heat toward those sectors, they will continue to contribute to from Antarctica in decades to come," said Rignot, who's also a at JPL.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, January 15 2019. 11:35 IST