11 October 2017

Secrets of hidden ice canyons revealed

Posted by Joseph Cariz

By ESA

Antarctic ice shelves may appear flat to the naked eye, but there can be huge changes going on underneath. 
Photo credit: N. Gourmelen

We are all aware that Antarctica’s ice shelves are thinning, but new research shows they may be even more fragile than previously thought. In a new study published in Geophysical Research Letters, a journal of the American Geophysical Union, scientists have discovered huge canyons cutting through the underbelly of these shelves. Thanks to the CryoSat and Sentinel-1 missions, new light is being shed on this hidden world.

Antarctica is surrounded by ice shelves, which are thick bands of ice that extend from the ice sheet and float on the coastal waters. They play an important role in buttressing the ice sheet on land, effectively slowing the sheet’s flow as it creeps seaward.

The ice sheet that covers Antarctica is, by its very nature, dynamic and constantly on the move. Recently, however, there have been a worrying number of reports about its floating shelves thinning and even collapsing, allowing the grounded ice inland to flow faster to the ocean and add to sea-level rise.

While scientists continue to study the changing face of Antarctica, monitoring cracks in the surface of the ice that might signal the demise of a shelf and learning how these changes are affecting the biology of coastal waters, they are also aware of dramatic changes taking place below the surface, hidden from view.

There are huge inverted canyons in the underside of ice shelves, but little is known about how they form and how they affect the stability of the ice sheet.

One type of canyon is thought to be caused by subglacial water that drains from beneath the ice sheet and runs into the ocean. In this region, the ocean water is stratified, with the warmer water at the bottom. However, as the colder meltwater pours down into the ocean it then rises because it is less dense than the seawater – but as it rises it drags up the warm bottom water which causes the underbelly of the floating ice shelf to melt.

Another type of canyon is thought to be caused by the way ocean water circulates under the shelf.

Scientists have been using the European Space Agency’s CryoSat spacecraft to study changes in the surface of the ice shelf and the Copernicus Sentinel-1 mission to study how shelves flow in order to learn more about what’s going on hidden from view.

Dotson ice shelf from Sentinel-1
Photo credit: Copernicus Sentinel data (2017), processed by A. Hogg/CPOM

Their focus has been on the Dotson ice shelf in West Antarctica, said Noel Gourmelen from the University of Edinburgh.

“We have found subtle changes in both surface elevation data from CryoSat and ice velocity from Sentinel-1 which shows that melting is not uniform, but has centred on a 5 km-wide channel that runs 60 km along the underside of the shelf,” he said. “Unlike most recent observations, we think that the channel under Dotson is eroded by warm water, about 1°C, as it circulates under the shelf, stirred clockwise and upward by Earth’s rotation.”

“Revisiting older satellite data, we think that this melt pattern has been taking place for at least the entire 25 years that Earth observation satellites have been recording changes in Antarctica,” Gourmelen said. “Over time, the melt has calved in a broad channel-like feature up to 200 m deep and 15 km across that runs the entire length of the underside of Dotson ice shelf.”

“We can see that this canyon is deepening by about 7 m a year and that the ice above is heavily crevassed,” he said. “Melt from Dotson ice shelf results in 40 billion tonnes of freshwater being poured into the Southern Ocean every year, and this canyon alone is responsible for the release of four billion tonnes – a significant proportion.”

The strength of an ice shelf depends on how thick it is. Because shelves are already suffering from thinning, these deepening canyons mean that fractures are likely to develop, and the grounded ice upstream will flow faster than would be the case otherwise.

“It is the first time that we’ve been able to see this process in the making and we will now expand our area of interest to the shelves all around Antarctica to see how they are responding,” Gourmelen said. “We couldn’t do this without CryoSat and the European Commission’s Copernicus Sentinel missions.”

This article originally appeared as a blog post on the European Space Agency website.