Current:Home > BackHow glaciers melted 20,000 years ago may offer clues about climate change's effects-LoTradeCoin
How glaciers melted 20,000 years ago may offer clues about climate change's effects
View Date:2025-01-11 09:37:03
During Earth's ice ages, much of North America and northern Europe were covered in massive glaciers.
About 20,000 years ago, those ice sheets began to melt rapidly, and the resulting water had to go somewhere — often, underneath the glaciers. Over time, massive valleys formed underneath the ice to drain the water away from the ice.
A new study about how glaciers melted after the last ice age could help researchers better understand how today's ice sheets might respond to extreme warmth as a result of climate change, the study's authors say.
The study, published this week in the journal Quaternary Science Reviews, helped clarify how — and how quickly — those channels were formed.
"Our results show, for the first time, that the most important mechanism is probably summer melting at the ice surface that makes its way to the bed through cracks or chimneys-like conduits and then flows under the pressure of the ice sheet to cut the channels," said Kelly Hogan, a co-author and geophysicist at the British Antarctic Survey.
Researchers found thousands of valleys under the North Sea
By analyzing 3D seismic reflection data originally collected through hazard assessments for oil and gas companies, researchers found thousands of valleys across the North Sea. Those valleys, some of them millions of years old, are now buried deep underneath the mud of the seafloor.
Some of the channels were massive — as big as 90 miles across and three miles wide ("several times larger than Loch Ness," the U.K.-based research group noted).
What surprised the researchers the most, they said, was how quickly those valleys formed. When ice melted rapidly, the water carved out the valleys in hundreds of years — lightning speed, in geologic terms.
"This is an exciting discovery," said lead author James Kirkham, a researcher with BAS and the University of Cambridge. "We know that these spectacular valleys are carved out during the death throes of ice sheets. By using a combination of state-of-the-art subsurface imaging techniques and a computer model, we have learnt that tunnel valleys can be eroded rapidly beneath ice sheets experiencing extreme warmth,"
The meltwater channels are traditionally thought to stabilize glacial melt, and by extension sea level rise, by helping to buffer the collapse of the ice sheets, researchers said.
The new findings could complicate that picture. But the fast rate at which the channels formed means including them in present-day models could help improve the accuracy of predictions about current ice sheet melt, the authors added.
Today, only two major ice sheets remain: Greenland and Antarctica. The rate at which they melt is likely to increase as the climate warms.
"The crucial question now is will this 'extra' meltwater flow in channels cause our ice sheets to flow more quickly, or more slowly, into the sea," Hogan said.
veryGood! (67732)
Related
- Trump ally Steve Bannon blasts ‘lawfare’ as he faces New York trial after federal prison stint
- Kansas’ AG is telling schools they must out trans kids to parents, even with no specific law
- Small plane with 5 people aboard makes emergency landing on southwest Florida interstate
- Move over, senior center — these 5 books center seniors
- Natural gas flares sparked 2 wildfires in North Dakota, state agency says
- Verizon teases upcoming Beyoncé Super Bowl commercial: What to know
- Veteran NFL assistant Wink Martindale to become Michigan Wolverines defensive coordinator
- Inside Céline Dion's Rare Health Battle
- Wildfire map: Thousands of acres burn near New Jersey-New York border; 1 firefighter dead
- Words on mysterious scroll buried by Mount Vesuvius eruption deciphered for first time after 2,000 years
Ranking
- Richard Allen found guilty in the murders of two teens in Delphi, Indiana. What now?
- Sofía Vergara and Joe Manganiello Settle Divorce After 6 Months
- Seiji Ozawa, acclaimed Japanese conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, dies at 88
- Taylor Swift fan proposes to his girlfriend during 'Love Story' performance in Tokyo
- Shaboozey to headline halftime show of Lions-Bears game on Thanksgiving
- Ireland women's team declines pregame pleasantries after Israeli player's antisemitism accusation
- Usher's Got Fans Fallin' in Love With His Sweet Family
- Costco, Trader Joe's and Walmart products made with cheese linked to deadly listeria outbreak
Recommendation
-
Will Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul end in KO? Boxers handle question differently
-
Seiji Ozawa, acclaimed Japanese conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, dies at 88
-
Prince Harry Makes Surprise Appearance at NFL Honors After Visit With King Charles III
-
Russian Figure Skater Kamila Valieva Blames Her Drug Ban on Grandfather’s Strawberry Dessert
-
A pair of Trump officials have defended family separation and ramped-up deportations
-
Microsoft's Super Bowl message: We're an AI company now
-
Cheap, plentiful and devastating: The synthetic drug kush is walloping Sierra Leone
-
Nurse acquitted of involuntary manslaughter in 2019 death of a 24-year-old California jail inmate