Hidden Volcanoes Melt Antarctic Glaciers from Below

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
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Low Earth Orbit
Antarctica is a land of ice. But dive below the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, and you'll find fire as well, in the form of subglacial volcanoes.

Now, a new study finds that these subglacial volcanoes and other geothermal "hotspots" are contributing to the melting of Thwaites Gylacier, a major river of ice that flows into Antarctica's Pine Island Bay. Areas of the glacier that sit near geologic features thought to be volcanic are melting faster than regions farther away from hotspots, said Dustin Schroeder, the study's lead author and a geophysicist at the University of Texas at Austin.

This melting could significantly affect ice loss in the West Antarctic, an area that is losing ice qu
"It's not just the fact that there is melting water, and that water is coming out," Schroeder told Live Science. "It's how that affects the flow and stability of the ice."

Researchers have long known that volcanoes lurk under the ice of West Antarctica. This is a seismically active region, where East and West Antarctica are rifting apart. In 2013, a team of scientists even found a new volcano beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet.

West Antarctica is also hemorrhaging ice due to climate change, and recent studies have suggested there is no way to reverse the retreat of West Antarctic glaciers. However, the timing of this retreat is still in question, Schroeder said — it could take hundreds of years, or thousands. It's important to understand which, given that meltwater from the West Antarctic Ice Sheet contributes directly to sea level rise.

Scientists use computer models to try to predict the future of the ice sheet, but their lack of understanding of subglacial geothermal energy has been a glaring gap in these models. Measuring geothermal activity under the ice sheet is so difficult that researchers usually just enter one, uniform estimate for the contributions of geothermal heat to melting, Schroeder said.

Of course, volcanism isn't uniform. Geothermal hotspots no doubt influence melting more in some areas than in others.

"It's the most complex thermal environment you might imagine," study co-author Don Blankenship, a geophysicist at UT Austin, said in a statement. "And then, you plop the most critical dynamically unstable ice sheet on planet Earth in the middle of this thing, and then you try to model it. It's virtually impossible."
 

darkbeaver

the universe is electric
Jan 26, 2006
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RR1 Distopia 666 Discordia
So a virtual but near impossible hundred year old model is computerized. It's just faster junk. The obvious solution is to start a massive scientific effort to map Dark CO2, cousin of Dark Matter and it's retarded twin Dark energy.
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
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Wrong, how can volcanoes be man's fault? Don't you guys know we are all going to die because of the CO2 we're exhaling. Everything bad that happens on this Earth is because of humans.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
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Vancouver Island
Wrong, how can volcanoes be man's fault? Don't you guys know we are all going to die because of the CO2 we're exhaling. Everything bad that happens on this Earth is because of humans.

Another good reason not to exercise. Breathing harder emmits more co2 so the health nuts are the real cause of global warming.
 

#juan

Hall of Fame Member
Aug 30, 2005
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It's a double-whammy... Not only are you emitting lots of noxious and planet-killing CO2, but using KY (petroleum jelly) funds most the oil/gas industry.

Most fracking done today is to generate the resource to produce sex lube.... Fact

Rather than KY jelly, use safe, organic, lard. A little dab'll do ya...