Rising Air Temperatures Break Up Larsen B Sea Ice from Antarctic Peninsula

NASA Earth Observatory, 2 February 2022

Rising air temperatures and increasingly wet weather caused a large region of sea ice off the Antarctic Peninsula, that had persisted even through the summer since 2011, to break up completely during a few days in January. Strong winds and the formation of meltwater ponds on the surface from rains apparently contributed to this rapid fracture. These darker ponds readily absorb sunlight and erode the ice below them, weakening the overall structure and leaving it vulnerable to fracturing and collapse.

This sea ice had persisted in the region where the 3250 km2 Larsen B Ice Shelf existed until 2002, when it disintegrated and allowed several nearby glaciers to speed up their discharge of ice into the sea. Ice shelves act like a buttress holding back land glaciers, and under cooler conditions a new ice shelf might have formed from this persistent sea ice to again slow glacier discharge and related sea-level rise. Its break-up underscores theories of more rapid Antarctic ice loss, as it shows the difficulty of “growing back” a new ice shelf under current conditions of CO2 rise and associated rapid global warming, not only of the atmosphere but of Antarctica’s surrounding waters.

https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/149410/larsen-b-embayment-breaks-up

Pam Pearson

Recent Posts

Without Emissions Cuts, A Real Risk of Extreme Sea-level Rise by 2100

Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society, 23 April 2026 Observations suggest we are currently tracking…

2 days ago

Increasing Avalanche Risk from Himalayan Hanging Glaciers

NPJ Natural Hazards, 16 April 2026) Rising temperatures and shifting regional precipitation patterns are reducing…

2 days ago

Heavier Rainfall, Glacier Melt Increase Flooding Across the Tibetan Plateau

Nature Communications, 18 March 2026 This study identified a marked increase in both flood frequency…

2 days ago

Intense Ocean Warming, Even If Temporary, Could Trigger Major Antarctic Ice Loss

The Cryosphere, 7 April 2026 Projections of Antarctica’s response to temporary but extreme ocean warming…

2 days ago

Antarctic Sea Ice Decline Linked to Extreme Weather and Climate Patterns

The Cryosphere, 1 April 2026 Antarctic sea ice stayed fairly steady from 2010-2014, but began…

2 days ago

COP30 Video of the Week: Emerging Evidence of Abrupt Changes in the Antarctic Environment

Changes in Antarctica can trigger fast and cascading impacts, often with global consequences. Multiple abrupt…

2 days ago