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Monday 06 April 2009
by: Michael Vincent
The
Wilkins Ice Shelf in Antarctica is in the final stages of collapse and
scientists are concerned the event shows climate change is happening
faster than previously thought.
An ice bridge, up to 40 kilometres long but at its
narrowest just 500 metres wide, was thought to be holding the giant
shelf to the Antarctic continent, but it recently snapped.
From above, parts of the Wilkins Ice Shelf now look like giant panes of shattered glass.
British Antarctic Survey glaciologist Professor David
Vaughan has been monitoring the Wilkins Ice Shelf for some time with
the help of satellite imagery.
"The ice shelf has almost exploded into a large number, hundreds of small icebergs," he said.
"The images on the European Space Agency website show that the ice bridge was relatively stable for the past month or two.
"In fact, we visited the ice bridge - we landed on it with
an aircraft and put a GPS, a satellite positioning system, onto the ice
shelf. And that's another way we've been monitoring its movements over
the last few weeks."
Researchers believe the ice bridge was an important barrier, keeping the rest of the ice shelf in place.
Dr Ted Scambos, the lead scientist at the National Snow and
Ice Data Centre at the University of Colorado, told ABC Radio National
he was concerned.
"The follow on is that large chunks of ice break away from
the area that's become unstable because it's no longer braced," he
said.
"And we see a retreat to a smaller ice shelf, or perhaps no
ice shelf at all. It's in the last stages. Right now I think about half
the Wilkins will remain after this is done."
The size of the impact on sea levels is still being debated
but scientists believe climate change is affecting the Antarctic to a
greater extent than previously expected.
Events on the Antarctic peninsula have prompted US Interior
Secretary Ken Salazar to release a statement saying it "demonstrates
once again the profound effects our planet is already experiencing,
more rapidly than previously thought, as a consequence of climate
change."
Dr Scambos says the question still remains as to what
extent greenhouse gases are leading the way in terms of climate change.
"You can't make that determination on the basis of watching something like the Wilkins break-up alone," he said.
"But when you take the overall picture of earth climate
changing virtually everywhere and at a rather rapid rate, and at the
same time see greenhouse gases increasing in the atmosphere at a rapid
rate, the correlation between those two things and the logical
progression of events that you anticipate for models all point to human
cost."
"A Stark Reminder"
Federal Climate Change Minister Penny Wong says the break-up
of the ice shelf will not prompt a speed-up of the Government's climate
change policies, but it should alert those who do not believe in global
warming to its dangers.
"This is a stark reminder to those politicians who don't want action on climate change that we need action," she said.
"We have a great many people still who are in denial on this issue - this is a stark reminder of why we must act."
Greenpeace says the break-up of the Wilkins Ice Shelf should
encourage authorities to tackle climate change at a quicker pace.
Steve Campbell, the head of campaigns for Greenpeace
Australia-Pacific, says the event represents a broader warning to
developed countries.
"Big developed countries such as Australia are going to
need to make big CO2 cuts ... to commit to something like halving our
CO2 emissions by 2020," he said.
"We're going to have to ... break our addiction to coal and
we're going to have to move to a new green economy based on
renewables."
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