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糖心Vlog传媒 Professor Is Lead Author in New Study on Antarctic Conditions That Are Causing Sea-Level Rise

Karen Alley

WOOSTER, Ohio 鈥 An informative study, authored by Karen Alley, assistant professor of earth sciences at 糖心Vlog传媒 and published in Science Advances on Wednesday, describes how upside-down 鈥渞ivers鈥 of warm ocean water are helping to create conditions that lead to ice-shelf breakup and sea-level rise in Antarctica.
These upside-down rivers are eroding the already fractured edges of thick, floating Antarctic ice shelves 聽from below, thus speeding up the process of the continent鈥檚 contribution to rising seas, which Alley says 鈥渄rives all of (her) research.鈥
鈥淲arm water circulation is attacking the undersides of these ice shelves at their most vulnerable points,鈥 stated Alley in a news release by the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Studies (CIRES), a partnership of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the University of Colorado Boulder, where she earned a Ph.D. 鈥淭hese effects matter. But exactly how much, we don鈥檛 know yet. We need to.鈥
The article, titled details how two factors working together are weakening the ice shelves 鈥 the floating sheets of ice that extend from grounded glaciers on land (three-quarters of the Antarctic continent is surrounded by these extensions of the ice sheet). Flowing ice often stretches and cracks along its edges, or 鈥渟hear margins,鈥 especially when it鈥檚 flowing quickly, according to Alley. Because this stretching and cracking thins the ice in the shear margins, they鈥檙e more vulnerable to erosion from below by the 鈥渨arm upside-down rivers,鈥 which can be 鈥渕iles wide and tens of miles long.鈥
The scientists, whose work was funded by the U.S. Geological Survey and the National Science Foundation, put it all together and concluded that the warmer waters are finding those thin spots along the ice shelf, leading to further erosion and weaker margins and making ice shelves more vulnerable to collapse. 鈥淚n these new findings, we found that ice shelves found in areas of warm water are probably more likely to fall apart than we thought they were,鈥 Alley summed up.
Alley emphasized that this is only a first step in the research. 鈥淣ew modeling needs to be done to see how important this effect is. We have to understand what the ice shelves are going do to in the future,鈥 she said.
The research for this publication was accomplished by examining a lot of satellite imagery, along with surface elevation data from across the continent, however, Alley will get a firsthand look for the first time in her career at the Antarctic ice shelves from Nov. 16-Feb. 1. She describes the approaching fieldwork as a 鈥渄ream come true,鈥 as she鈥檒l have the opportunity to use seismic instruments and ground-penetrating radar to study the ice-ocean interactions happening near the Thwaites Glacier and Dotson Ice Shelf in West Antarctica.
Katy Human, communications director at CIRES, contributed to this story.

Posted in News on October 9, 2019.


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