Environment

Ice shelf's eerie song could be early warning system for collapse

Ice shelf's eerie song could be early warning system for collapse
Researchers have found that the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica is "singing", which could help provide an early warning system for collapse
Researchers have found that the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica is "singing", which could help provide an early warning system for collapse
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Laying power cables for the solar-powered seismic sensors
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Laying power cables for the solar-powered seismic sensors
Ice shelves perform a vital function in slowing the rate of ice flow into the sea
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Ice shelves perform a vital function in slowing the rate of ice flow into the sea
Researchers have found that the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica is "singing", which could help provide an early warning system for collapse
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Researchers have found that the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica is "singing", which could help provide an early warning system for collapse
The Ross Ice Shelf is the largest in Antarctica
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The Ross Ice Shelf is the largest in Antarctica
Base camp for the mission to the Ross ice Shelf
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Base camp for the mission to the Ross ice Shelf
Rick Aster, co-author of the new study, on an installation trip to the Ross ice Shelf
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Rick Aster, co-author of the new study, on an installation trip to the Ross ice Shelf
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Ice shelves perform a vital function in slowing down the rate of glacier melt in Antarctica, so scientists keep an eye on them for signs of collapse. And as the continent's largest, the Ross Ice Shelf is particularly important. After monitoring seismic activity over a few years, researchers noticed that the Ross Ice Shelf is "singing" – and listening out for changes in that song could be an early warning system for potential problems.

As temperatures rise, glaciers are melting at an increasing pace, but ice shelves are doing their part to slow that process down. Unfortunately, these ice shelves are themselves collapsing, which speeds up the rate of glacial melt and, in turn, sea level rise. Last year, a giant iceberg calved off the Larsen C ice shelf, and now continuously-sprawling cracks threaten to destabilize the rest of the ice shelf.

Roughly the size of France, the Ross Ice Shelf is crucial to keeping the southern continent together, so monitoring it is of particular interest to scientists. To do so, 34 seismic sensors were buried beneath the thick snow that blankets the shelf, allowing researchers to monitor its structure and how it moves.

After analyzing data gathered between late 2014 and early 2017, researchers noticed that the snow dunes atop the ice shelf were almost always vibrating. On closer inspection, it seems that the wind blasting across the surface is responsible, creating a constant hum too low for human ears to pick up.

But it wasn't just a one-note song. The pitch changed with the weather, vibrating at different frequencies with storm winds and as the surface temperature rose and fell.

Rick Aster, co-author of the new study, on an installation trip to the Ross ice Shelf
Rick Aster, co-author of the new study, on an installation trip to the Ross ice Shelf

"It's kind of like you're blowing a flute, constantly, on the ice shelf," says Julien Chaput, lead author of a study describing the work. "Either you change the velocity of the snow by heating or cooling it, or you change where you blow on the flute, by adding or destroying dunes. And that's essentially the two forcing effects we can observe."

The research suggests that using sensitive seismic stations to monitor these vibrations could help scientists understand how the ice shelf is responding to the changing climate.

Increasing the frequency of the sounds, the team turned the Ross Ice Shelf's "song" into something we can hear. The eerie results sound like the kind of natural "music" often heard from objects in space. Listen for yourself in the video below.

The research was published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

Source: American Geophysical Union

Ghostly sounds of a vibrating Antarctic Ice Shelf

View gallery - 6 images
2 comments
2 comments
ljaques
"Last year, a giant iceberg calved off the Larsen C ice shelf, and now continuously-sprawling cracks threaten to destabilize the rest of the ice shelf." Yeah, yeah, yeah. But you said nothing about the 90 newly discovered lava domes under Antarctica, or the rising land. I wonder how much that had to play in the crackoff of Larsen C in the first place, don't you? "You" keep saying that the sea is rising, but perhaps the shelf dropped to sea level after being hoisted on a lava petard, eh? Keep researching, folks. This time with an open mind and taking in everything that's =really= happening down there, OK?
christopher
"monitoring it is of particular interest to scientists"...
More like gives them alarmist excuses to get fun taxpayer funded holidays... while everyone ignores the elephant in the room... that there's not a licking bit of difference they'll ever make to the direction our planet is headed.