19-square-mile
ice sheet breaks loose in Canada
TORONTO (AP) — A chunk of ice shelf
nearly the size of Manhattan has broken away from Ellesmere Island in Canada’s
northern Arctic, another dramatic indication of how warmer temperatures are
changing the polar frontier, scientists said Sept.3.
Derek Mueller, an Arctic ice shelf specialist at Trent
University in Ontario, told The Associated Press that the 4,500-year-old
Markham Ice Shelf separated in early August and the 19-square-mile shelf is now
adrift in the Arctic Ocean.
“The Markham Ice Shelf was a big surprise because it
suddenly disappeared. We went under cloud for a bit during our research and
when the weather cleared up, all of a sudden there was no more ice shelf.
“It was a shocking event that underscores the rapidity of
changes taking place in the Arctic,” said Muller.
Muller also said that two large sections of ice detached
from the Serson Ice Shelf, shrinking that ice feature
by 47 square miles — or 60 percent — and that the Ward Hunt Ice Shelf has also
continued to break up, losing an additional eight square miles.
Muller reported last month that
seven square miles of the 170-square-mile and 130-feet-thick Ward Hunt shelf
had broken off.
This comes on the heels of unusual cracks in a northern
Greenland glacier, rapid melting of a southern Greenland glacier,
and a near record loss for Arctic sea ice this summer.
And earlier this year a 160-square mile chunk of an
Antarctic ice shelf disintegrated.
“Reduced sea ice conditions and unusually high air
temperatures have facilitated the ice shelf losses this summer,” said Luke
Copland, director of the Laboratory for Cryospheric
Research at the University of Ottawa. “And extensive new cracks across
remaining parts of the largest remaining ice shelf, the Ward Hunt, mean that it
will continue to disintegrate in the coming years.”
Formed by accumulating snow and freezing meltwater, ice shelves are large platforms of thick,
ancient sea ice that float on the ocean’s surface but are connected to land.
Ellesmere Island was once entirely ringed by a single
enormous ice shelf that broke up in the early 1900s.
All that is left today are the four much smaller shelves
that together cover little more than 299 square miles.
Martin Jeffries of the U.S. National Science Foundation
and University of Alaska Fairbanks said in a statement Sept. 2 that the
summer’s ice shelf loss is equivalent to over three times the area of
Manhattan, totaling 82 square miles — losses that have reduced Arctic Ocean ice
cover to its second-biggest retreat since satellite measurements began 30 years
ago.
“These changes are irreversible under the present climate
and indicate that the environmental conditions that have kept these ice shelves
in balance for thousands of years are no longer present,” said Muller.
During the last century, when ice shelves would break off,
thick sea ice would eventually reform in their place.
“But today, warmer temperatures and a changing climate
means there’s no hope for regrowth. A scary
scenario,” said Muller.
The loss of these ice shelves means that rare ecosystems
that depend on them are on the brink of extinction, said Warwick Vincent,
director of Laval University’s Centre for Northern Studies and a researcher in
the program ArcticNet.
“The Markham Ice Shelf had half the biomass for the entire
Canadian Arctic Ice Shelf ecosystem as a habitat for cold, tolerant microbial
life; algae that sit on top of the ice shelf and photosynthesize like plants
would. Now that it’s disappeared, we’re looking at ecosystems on the verge of
extinction,” said Muller.
Along with decimating ecosystems, drifting ice shelves and
warmer temperatures that will cause further melting ice pose a hazard to
populated shipping routes in the Arctic region — a phenomenon that Canada’s
Prime Minister Stephen Harper seems to welcome.
Harper announced he plans to expand exploration of the
region’s known oil and mineral deposits, a possibility that has become more
evident as a result of melting sea ice.
It is the burning of oil and other fossil fuels that
scientists say is the chief cause of manmade warming and melting ice.
Harper also said Canada would toughen
reporting requirements for ships entering its waters in the Far North, where
some of those territorial claims are disputed by the United States and other
countries.