ABSTRACTOn 2 March 2016, several small en échelon tabular icebergs calved from the seaward front of the McMurdo Ice Shelf, and a previously inactive rift widened and propagated by ~3 km, ~25% of its previous length, setting the stage for the future calving of a ~14 km2 iceberg. Within 24 h of these events, all remaining land-fast sea ice that had been stabilizing the ice shelf broke-up. The events were witnessed by time-lapse cameras at nearby Scott Base, and put into context using nearby seismic and automatic weather station data, satellite imagery and subsequent ground observation. Although the exact trigger of calving and rifting cannot be identified definitively, seismic records reveal superimposed sets of both long-period (>10 s) se...
On 12th July 2017, the A68 iceberg completely calved away from the Larsen C Ice Shelf on the Antarct...
Iceberg calving is the detachment of ice from ice shelves or glaciers. Although calving is a natural...
Iceberg calving is a dominant mass loss mechanism for Antarctic ice shelves, second only to basal me...
The sudden propagation of a major preexisting rift (full-thickness crack) in late 2016 on the Larsen...
Ice shelf instability is one of the main sources of uncertainty in Antarctica's contribution to futu...
On 26 September 2019, a massive iceberg broke off the west side of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS) in East...
Iceberg calving accounts for two thirds of the mass discharged from the cryosphere to the ocean. Des...
The calving of icebergs from large Antarctic ice shelves is controlled mainly by the formation and p...
Despite the potentially detrimental impact of large-scale calving events on the geometry and ice flo...
The Larsen C Ice Shelf is the most northerly of the remaining major Antarctic Peninsula ice shelves ...
We investigate the iceberg-calving cycle of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS), East Antarctica, using eviden...
The collapse of several ice shelves in the Antarctic Peninsula since the late twentieth century has ...
The Larsen C ice shelf is the most northerly of the remaining major Antarctic Peninsula ice shelves ...
Published online 13 June 2018Understanding the causes of recent catastrophic ice shelf disintegratio...
On 12th July 2017, the A68 iceberg completely calved away from the Larsen C Ice Shelf on the Antarct...
Iceberg calving is the detachment of ice from ice shelves or glaciers. Although calving is a natural...
Iceberg calving is a dominant mass loss mechanism for Antarctic ice shelves, second only to basal me...
The sudden propagation of a major preexisting rift (full-thickness crack) in late 2016 on the Larsen...
Ice shelf instability is one of the main sources of uncertainty in Antarctica's contribution to futu...
On 26 September 2019, a massive iceberg broke off the west side of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS) in East...
Iceberg calving accounts for two thirds of the mass discharged from the cryosphere to the ocean. Des...
The calving of icebergs from large Antarctic ice shelves is controlled mainly by the formation and p...
Despite the potentially detrimental impact of large-scale calving events on the geometry and ice flo...
The Larsen C Ice Shelf is the most northerly of the remaining major Antarctic Peninsula ice shelves ...
We investigate the iceberg-calving cycle of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS), East Antarctica, using eviden...
The collapse of several ice shelves in the Antarctic Peninsula since the late twentieth century has ...
The Larsen C ice shelf is the most northerly of the remaining major Antarctic Peninsula ice shelves ...
Published online 13 June 2018Understanding the causes of recent catastrophic ice shelf disintegratio...
On 12th July 2017, the A68 iceberg completely calved away from the Larsen C Ice Shelf on the Antarct...
Iceberg calving is the detachment of ice from ice shelves or glaciers. Although calving is a natural...
Iceberg calving is a dominant mass loss mechanism for Antarctic ice shelves, second only to basal me...