Updated
Updated · Futura · Jul 11
Study Warns Antarctic Ice Loss Could Spur More Subglacial Eruptions Over 100s of Years
Updated
Updated · Futura · Jul 11

Study Warns Antarctic Ice Loss Could Spur More Subglacial Eruptions Over 100s of Years

2 articles · Updated · Futura · Jul 11

Summary

  • Numerical simulations in a new Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems study found thinning Antarctic ice could increase both the frequency and size of subglacial eruptions.
  • West Antarctica is especially exposed because ice loss reduces pressure on buried magma reservoirs, allowing gas bubbles to form and pushing magma upward toward eruption.
  • More eruptions could in turn accelerate ice melt, creating a feedback loop in which volcanic activity and ice-sheet destabilization reinforce each other.
  • Researchers said the process would likely unfold over hundreds of years, but warned it could continue even if emissions cuts slow future warming.

Insights

Could an unstoppable volcanic feedback loop under Antarctica become the next irreversible climate tipping point?
How can we monitor volcanoes buried under miles of ice to predict eruptions that could accelerate global sea-level rise?

Antarctica’s Melting Ice and the Glacio-Volcanic Feedback: How Subglacial Volcanoes Could Accelerate Global Sea-Level Rise and Climate Change

Overview

Antarctica's ice sheet is losing mass at an accelerating rate, which is a major concern for both global sea-level rise and climate stability. Recent data highlight that while some parts of the Antarctic coastline have remained stable over the past three decades, other regions are experiencing significant changes. This shows that the continent's ice responds in complex and varied ways to a warming climate. The Antarctic Ice Sheet does not react uniformly to temperature increases, with different regions showing different patterns of change. These ongoing shifts underscore the urgent need to understand and address the impacts of climate change on Antarctica.

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