May 22, 2024
From NASA
A large wedge of ice broke from Antarctica’s Brunt Ice Shelf in late May 2024, the most recent in a series of notable icebergs spawned by the shelf in the past few years.
Soon after the break, the TIRS-2 (Thermal Infrared Sensor-2) on Landsat 9 captured this pair of false-color images.
They are part of a special expanded data collection programcalled LEAP (Landsat Extended Acquisitions of the Poles), which since 2022 has been building year-round image records of glaciers, ice shelves, and sea ice around Antarctica, Greenland, and the Arctic Ocean.
Thermal images like these can help scientists keep watch over Earth’s polar areas, even when the Sun is below the horizon and visible images are unavailable.
In these images, acquired on May 20 (left) and May 22 (right), yellows and oranges indicate areas where temperatures are warmer, like open water or thin sea ice, while blues denote areas of colder temperatures, like the thicker ice of the iceberg and ice shelf.
Notice that the iceberg is already on the move, evident in the widening gap between the iceberg and ice shelf.
Animation of @ESA_EO #Sentinel1 Extra-Wide mode images of Brunt Ice Shelf covering the three major calving events over the last 3.5 years.
— Adrian Luckman (@adrian_luckman) May 22, 2024
The ice shelf is now at its smallest recorded extent pic.twitter.com/ftewkf10UQ
Christopher Shuman, a University of Maryland, Baltimore County, glaciologist based at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, estimated that the iceberg spans about 375 square kilometers (145 square miles), which is about the same size as Portland, Oregon.
The U.S.
National Ice Center confirmed the name Iceberg A-83, which aligns with the longstanding naming convention that relates to where around the continent an iceberg is first observed.
The U.S.
National Ice Center confirmed the name Iceberg A-83, which aligns with the longstanding naming convention that relates to where around the continent an iceberg is first observed.
Iceberg A-83 was first spotted off the Brunt Ice Shelf in the eastern Weddell Sea.
It broke from a rift known as the “Halloween Crack” that appeared in October 2016 and grew eastward from the McDonald Ice Rumples.
The rumples are the result of ice that flows over an underwater obstruction, where the bedrock rises high enough to reach into the underside of the floating ice shelf.
This rocky formation impedes the flow of ice and causes pressure waves, crevasses, and rifts to form at the shelf’s surface.
A brand new iceberg, dubbed A-83, has broken off from the Brunt Ice Shelf in Antarctica.
— CIRA (@CIRA_CSU) May 24, 2024
Polar-orbiting satellites captured this chunk of ice, estimated to be bigger than the city of Las Vegas, utilizing the day/night band as darkness engulfs the southern-most continent. pic.twitter.com/MeoyqbemId
Icebergs, even large ones like those recently released from the Brunt, are part of a natural, cyclical process of growth and decay at the limits of Earth’s ice sheets.
As glacial ice flows from the inland ice sheet and spreads out over the sea, shelf areas farthest from shore grow thinner.
Susceptible to melting from above or below, they are more prone to forming rifts and eventually breaking away.
Although iceberg calving is normal, the Brunt Ice Shelf is feeling the same pressures as elsewhere around Antarctica, including low sea ice conditions.
When less sea ice is present, ice shelves are more exposed to destabilizing wind and wave action.
Iceberg A-83 was first spotted off the Brunt Ice Shelf in the eastern Weddell Sea.
(The European Space Agency)
The remainder of the Brunt is still holding on to the McDonald Ice Rumples.
But the new Iceberg A-83, along with icebergs A-74 and A-81 that broke off in recent years, have greatly diminished the ice shelf’s area since early 2021.
“As ice shelves get smaller and smaller, they become more vulnerable to extreme events that can, as in the case of the Glenzer/Conger Ice Shelf, lead to destabilization and total loss of the floating glacial ice area,” Shuman said.
The Brunt continues to display fractures on its surface, such as Chasm 2 (west of these images), that are expected to play a continued role in the evolution of this shelf.
Data from Landsat collected year-round, along with insights from other sensors, will help scientists make sense of that future.
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