Forum für Wissenschaft, Industrie und Wirtschaft

Hauptsponsoren:     Siemens  n-tv 
Datenbankrecherche:

Fachgebiet (optional):

 

Tohoku Tsunami Created Icebergs In Antarctica

09.08.2011
A NASA scientist and her colleagues were able to observe for the first time the power of an earthquake and tsunami to break off large icebergs a hemisphere away.

Anzeige

Kelly Brunt, a cryosphere specialist at Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., and colleagues were able to link the calving of icebergs from the Sulzberger Ice Shelf in Antarctica following the Tohoku Tsunami, which originated with an earthquake off the coast of Japan in March 2011. The finding, detailed in a paper published online today in the Journal of Glaciology, marks the first direct observation of such a connection between tsunamis and icebergs.


The birth of an iceberg can come about in any number of ways. Often, scientists will see the towering, frozen monoliths break into the polar seas and work backwards to figure out the cause.

So when the Tohoku Tsunami was triggered in the Pacific Ocean on March 11 this spring, Brunt and colleagues immediately looked south. All the way south. Using multiple satellite images, Brunt, Emile Okal at Northwestern University and Douglas MacAyeal at University of Chicago were able to observe new icebergs floating off to sea shortly after the sea swell of the tsunami reached Antarctica.

To put the dynamics of this event in perspective: An earthquake off the coast of Japan caused massive waves to explode out from its epicenter. Swells of water swarmed toward an ice shelf in Antarctica, 8,000 miles (13,600 km) away, and about 18 hours after the earthquake occurred, those waves broke off several chunks of ice that together equaled about two times the surface area of Manhattan. According to historical records, this particular piece of ice hadn't budged in at least 46 years before the tsunami came along.

And as all that was happening, scientists were able to watch the Antarctic ice shelves in as close to real-time as satellite imagery allows, and catch a glimpse of a new iceberg floating off into the Ross Sea.

"In the past we've had calving events where we've looked for the source. It's a reverse scenario – we see a calving and we go looking for a source," Brunt said. "We knew right away this was one of the biggest events in recent history – we knew there would be enough swell. And this time we had a source."

Scientists first speculated in the 1970s that repeated flexing of an ice shelf – a floating extension of a glacier or ice sheet that sits on land – by waves could cause icebergs to break off. Scientific papers in more recent years have used models and tide gauge measurements in an attempt to quantify the impact of sea swell on ice shelf fronts.

The swell was likely only about a foot high (30 cm) when it reached the Sulzberger shelf. But the consistency of the waves created enough stress to cause the calving. This particular stretch of floating ice shelf is about 260 feet (80 meters) thick, from its exposed surface to its submerged base.

Thick cloud cover briefly fell away to reveal this first image of icebergs breaking away from the Sulzberger Ice Shelf due to sea swell from the Tohoku Tsunami, which had originated 8,000 miles away about 18 hours earlier. The icebergs can be seen behind a thin layer of clouds just off the ice shelf near the center of the image. Source: MODIS Rapid Response/NASA
› View larger
› View the same area two days prior When the earthquake happened, Okal immediately honed in on the vulnerable faces of the Antarctic continent. Using knowledge of iceberg calving and what a NOAA model showed of the tsunami's projected path across the unobstructed Pacific and Southern oceans, Okal, Brunt and MacAyeal began looking at what is called the Sulzberger Ice Shelf. The Sulzberger shelf faces Sulzberger Bay and New Zealand.

Through a fortuitous break in heavy cloud cover, Brunt spotted what appeared to be a new iceberg in MODerate Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) data.

"I didn't have strong expectations either way whether we'd be able to see something," Brunt said. "The fastest imagery I could get to was from MODIS Rapid Response, but it was pretty cloudy. So I was more pessimistic that it would be too cloudy and we couldn't see anything. Then, there was literally one image where the clouds cleared, and you could see a calving event."

A closer look with synthetic aperture radar data from the European Space Agency satellite, Envisat, which can penetrate clouds, found images of two moderate-sized icebergs – with more, smaller bergs in their wake. The largest iceberg was about four by six miles in surface area – itself about equal to the surface area of one Manhattan. All the ice surface together about equaled two Manhattans. After looking at historical satellite imagery, the group determined the small outcropping of ice had been there since at least 1965, when it was captured by USGS aerial photography.

The proof that seismic activity can cause Antarctic iceberg calving might shed some light on our knowledge of past events, Okal said.

"In September 1868, Chilean naval officers reported an unseasonal presence of large icebergs in the southernmost Pacific Ocean, and it was later speculated that they may have calved during the great Arica earthquake and tsunami a month earlier," Okal said. "We know now that this is a most probable scenario."

MacAyeal said the event is more proof of the interconnectedness of Earth systems.

"This is an example not only of the way in which events are connected across great ranges of oceanic distance, but also how events in one kind of Earth system, i.e., the plate tectonic system, can connect with another kind of seemingly unrelated event: the calving of icebergs from Antarctica's ice sheet," MacAyeal said.

In what could be one of the more lasting observations from this whole event, the bay in front of the Sulzberger shelf was largely lacking sea ice at the time of the tsunami. Sea ice is thought to help dampen swells that might cause this kind of calving. At the time of the Sumatra tsunami in 2004, the potentially vulnerable Antarctic fronts were buffered by a lot of sea ice, Brunt said, and scientists observed no calving events that they could tie to that tsunami.

"There are theories that sea ice can protect from calving. There was no sea ice in this case," Brunt said. "It’s a big chunk of ice that calved because of an earthquake 13,000 kilometers away. I think it's pretty cool."

GODDARD RELEASE: 11-48

Patrick Lynch
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
757-897-2047
patrick.lynch@nasa.gov

Steve Koppes
University of Chicago
773-702-8366
skoppes@uchicago.edu

Patrick Lynch | Quelle: EurekAlert!
Weitere Informationen: www.nasa.gov
www.nasa.gov/topics/earth/features/tsunami-bergs.html

Weitere Nachrichten aus der Kategorie Geowissenschaften:

nachricht NASA's TRMM satellite sees heavy rainfall in Tropical Storm Bud
24.05.2012 | NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

nachricht NASA sees Tropical Storm Sanvu continue to intensify
24.05.2012 | NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center

Alle Nachrichten aus der Kategorie Geowissenschaften >>>

Die aktuellsten Pressemeldungen zum Suchbegriff Innovation >>>


Die letzten 5 Focus-News des innovations-reports im Überblick:

Im Focus: Im wahrsten Sinne „Spitzenforschung“: IPHT-Forscher untersuchen Eiweißfasern mit größter Genauigkeit


Krankheiten wie Parkinson, Alzheimer und bestimmte Krebsformen gehen auf eine fehlerhafte Faltung und Aggregation von Eiweißen im Körper zurück.

Wissenschaftlern des Instituts für Photonische Technologien (IPHT) in Jena ist es erstmals gelungen, Proteinstrukturen auf sub-molekularer Ebene nachzuweisen und spektroskopisch zu analysieren. Ein wichtiger Schritt zum Verständnis der Krankheitsursachen.

„Bis heute hat man nicht genau verstanden, was die fehlerhafte Faltung und Aggregation von Eiweißen, zum Beispiel im Zusammenhang mit Alzheimer, ...

Im Focus: Widerspenstiges Quasiteilchen erzeugt


Die Quantenphysik beschreibt physikalische Vorgänge in Festkörpern und anderen Vielteilchensystemen auch mit Hilfe von Quasiteilchen.

Innsbrucker Physikern um Rudolf Grimm ist es nun erstmals gelungen, ein neues Quasiteilchen - ein repulsives Polaron - in einem Quantengas experimentell zu erzeugen. Die Forscher berichten darüber in der Online-Ausgabe der Fachzeitschrift Nature.

Ultrakalte Quantengase sind ein ideales Experimentierfeld, um physikalische Phänomene in Festkörpern zu simulieren. Unter streng kontrollierten Bedingungen ...

Im Focus: Licht lässt Partikel wachsen - Forscher entdecken neuen Mechanismus in der Atmosphäre


Licht lässt die Partikel in der Atmosphäre wachsen. In einem Experiment hat ein internationales Forscherteam erstmals einen neuen Mechanismus nachweisen können, bei dem Partikel durch Licht größer werden und der damit Einfluss auf die Wolkenbildung und das Klima hat.

Photokatalytische Reaktionen können zu einer schnellen Bindung von nicht kondensierenden flüchtigen organischen Kohlenwasserstoffen (VOCs) auf der Oberfläche der Partikel führen. Unter solchen Bedingungen nehme die Größe und Masse der Partikel schnell zu, schreiben die Wissenschaftler im renommierten Fachblatt PNAS.

Die Ergebnisse des Laborexperimentes könnten Effekte erklären, die bisher schon bei Feldkampagnen ...

Im Focus: Abschreckung: Tabak signalisiert angreifenden Zikaden Verteidigungsbereitschaft


Ähnlich wie blutsaugende Insekten prüfen Pflanzenschädlinge ihren Wirt auf Abwehrsignale, bevor sie anfangen zu fressen

Pflanzen bilden wenige Minuten nach Angriff eines Fraßfeindes Jasmonsäure, ein Hormon, das die Verteidigung gegen Insekten in Gange setzt mit der Folge, dass giftige Stoffe wie Nikotin oder Verdauungshemmer in den Blättern akkumulieren.

Wissenschaftler des Max-Planck-Instituts für chemische Ökologie, Jena, haben jetzt herausgefunden, dass Zwergzikaden die Verteidigungsbereitschaft von Tabakpflanzen aufspüren können. ...

Im Focus: Erbgutkopie reist im Protein-Koffer


Wissenschaftlern vom Institut für Physikalische und Theoretische Chemie der Universität Bonn ist es erstmals gelungen, den Transport eines wichtigen Informationsträgers in biologischen Zellen praktisch unmodifiziert in Echtzeit zu filmen.

Die Studie zeigt, wie die so genannte Boten-RNA die Zellkernhülle überwindet und vom Zellkern in das Zytoplasma gelangt. Diese Arbeit ist nun in dem renommierten Journal „Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA“ (PNAS) publiziert.

Der Bauplan aller Lebewesen ist in ihrem Erbgut gespeichert. Dieses lagert bei höheren ...

Alle Focus-News des innovations-reports >>>

Anzeige

B2B Suche
Produkt / Dienstleistung
Firma / Organisation

Anzeige

IHR
JOB & KARRIERE
SERVICE
im innovations-report
in Kooperation mit academics
Aktuell

Energieversorger vor dem Umbruch

24.05.2012 | Studien Analysen

Stem-cell-growing surface enables bone repair

24.05.2012 | Biowissenschaften Chemie

Im wahrsten Sinne „Spitzenforschung“: IPHT-Forscher untersuchen Eiweißfasern mit größter Genauigkeit

24.05.2012 | Biowissenschaften Chemie

VideoLinks
B2B-VideoLinks
Weitere VideoLinks >>>
Veranstaltungen

NieKE Themenforum: Ökonomie - Tierschutz - Lebensmittelsicherheit

24.05.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

Nachhaltigkeit in der Schifffahrt: Werte vs. Wertschöpfung

24.05.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

Wissenschaft und Öffentlichkeit

24.05.2012 | Veranstaltungsnachrichten

FindAndHelp