Fastest moving glacier in the world sheds record breaking chunk of ice big enough to cover MANHATTAN in a 300m thick frozen slab
Satellite
images show that the fastest moving glacier in the world shed a chunk of
ice measuring around 12.5 sq km this week – one of the most significant
calving events on record.
Radar
images from the European Space Agency's Sentinel-1A captured the
Jakobshavn glacier in western Greenland before and after the event,
which took place between 14 and 16 August.
Comparing
images taken on 27 July, and 13 and 19 August, the new face of the
glacier has been pushed inland by several kilometres to what appears to
be its furthest easterly location since monitoring began in the
mid-1880s.
The image
time series suggests that between 27 July and 13 August, the glacier
advanced westward before the calving caused rapid retreat of the ice
front to its position on 19 August.
It is estimated that the glacier lost a total area of 12.5 sq km.
Assuming
the ice is about 1400 m deep, this equates a volume of 17.5 cubic km –
which could cover the whole of Manhattan Island by a layer of ice about
300 m thick.
The history of this last calving event is also revealed in images taken by Sentinel-2A on 6 and 16 August.
Jakobshavn
glacier drains 6.5% of the Greenland ice sheet, producing around 10%
its icebergs. This amounts to some 35 billion tonnes of ice that calve
every year.
Other similar events have been documented where the glacier parted with 7 sq km of ice, both earlier this year and back in 2010.
Icebergs
are often so large that they cannot float away easily. They remain,
sometimes for years, stuck on the bottom in shallower areas of the fjord
until they finally melt enough to disperse, break into pieces or are
pushed out by icebergs coming up from behind.
Studied
for over 250 years, the Jakobshavn glacier has helped to develop our
understanding of the importance of ice streams and glaciers in climate
change, icecap glaciology, and how they affect sea level.
Sentinel-1A
and Sentinel-2A are the first two satellites in orbit for Europe’s
Copernicus programme. While Sentinel-1A is an all-weather, day-and-night
radar imaging mission, Sentinel-2A carries a multispectral imager.
No comments:
Post a Comment