Collapse of Antarctic Ice Shelf Unprecedented
Eugene Domack Publishes Research in Nature
By Vige Barrie
August 3, 2005
The Antarctic Peninsula is undergoing greater warming than
almost anywhere on Earth, a condition perhaps associated with
human-induced greenhouse effects. According to the cover article
published in the August 4 issue of the journal Nature, the spectacular
collapse of Antarctica's Larsen B Ice Shelf, an area roughly the
size of Rhode Island, is unprecedented during the past 10,000 years.
Eugene Domack, professor of geosciences at Hamilton College and the
author of the paper, has been the lead scientist of a
multi-institutional, international effort that combines a variety of
disciplines in examining the response of the Antarctic Peninsula to
modern warming. Domack says, "Our work contributes to the understanding
of these changes -- where they are occurring first and with greatest
magnitude and impact upon the environment."
Domack's paper
provides evidence that the break-up of the ice shelf was caused by a
combination of long-term thinning (by a few tens of meters) over
thousands of years and short term (multi-decadal) cumulative increases
in surface air temperature that have exceeded the natural variation of
regional climate during the Holocene period (the last 10,000 years
since the end of the last Ice Age).
Using data collected from
six sediment cores in the vicinity of the former ice shelf, Domack and
his colleagues conclude that the Larsen ice shelf had been intact but
was slowly thinning during the course of the current interglacial
period. They attribute the recent collapse to the effects of climate
warming in the Antarctic Peninsula, which is more pronounced in this
region than elsewhere in Antarctica or the rest of the world. The
Larsen B ice shelf is not alone in its demise. In recent years, the
Antarctic Peninsula has lost ice shelves totaling over 4825 square
miles.
Domack, who has taken more than 100 undergraduates to
Antarctica since 1987, studies the paleohistory of the Larsen Ice
Shelf. He was awarded $851,941 from the National Science Foundation
Office of Polar Programs in 2004. Domack was a 2004 Guggenheim Fellow,
a Joint Oceanographic Institutions 2000 Distinguished Lecturer and an
invited speaker at over 20 international conferences including the 1999
American Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting.
Collaborators
on the project include researchers from Hamilton College; Colgate
University, University of New Hampshire, Southern Illinois University -
Carbondale, University of Barcelona and Queen's University in Kingston,
Ontario.