Get the latest Science News and Discoveries

9,000-year-old ice melt shows how fast Antarctica can fall apart


Around 9,000 years ago, East Antarctica went through a dramatic meltdown that was anything but isolated. Scientists have discovered that warm deep ocean water surged beneath the region’s floating ice shelves, causing them to collapse and unleashing a domino effect of ice loss across the continent. This process created a “cascading positive feedback,” where melting in one area sped up melting elsewhere through interconnected ocean currents.

None

Get the Android app

Or read this on ScienceDaily

Read more on:

Photo of Year

Year

Photo of Antarctica

Antarctica

Photo of old ice melt

old ice melt

Related news:

News photo

England facing drastic measures due to extreme drought next year

News photo

A 500-million-year-old brain "radar" still shapes how you see

News photo

2.75-Million-Year-Old Tools Rewrite Human Technological History