| Antarctic Boulders May Point To Sea Level Rise 
    
 NORWAY: March 3, 2008
 
 
 OSLO - Boulders as big as soccer balls show that a thinning of West 
    Antarctic glaciers has become 20 times faster in recent decades and may hold 
    clues to future sea level rise, scientists said on Friday.
 
 
 Rocks trapped in glacier ice start to react like clockwork when exposed to 
    the air because of a bombardment of cosmic rays. Scientists studied boulders 
    by three glaciers to find how long they have been out of the ice and so 
    judge the pace of thinning.
 
 "Boulders the size of footballs could help scientists predict the west 
    Antarctic ice sheet's contribution to sea level rise," according to 
    scientists at British and German research institutes in a report in the 
    journal Geology.
 
 "Initial results show that Pine Island Glacier has 'thinned' by around 4 
    centimetres (1.6 inch) per year over the past 5,000 years, while Smith and 
    Pope Glaciers thinned by just over 2 cm per year during the past 14,500 
    years," they said.
 
 "These rates are more than 20 times slower than recent changes: satellite, 
    airborne and ground based observations made since the 1990s show that Pine 
    Island Glacier has thinned by around 1.6 metres per year in recent years," 
    it said.
 
 No one even saw Antarctica before sailors spotted the coast in 1820 so there 
    are scant historical records and little understanding of how ice sheets 
    might react to rising temperatures linked to global warming.
 
 The area of West Antarctica studied, the Amundsen Sea Embayment, is of 
    especial concern because much of the bedrock under the ice is below sea 
    level. The weight of the ice keeps it in place but scientists fear it could 
    float loose.
 
 
 SEAS RISE
 
 If that happened, world sea levels would rise by 1.5 metres. If all of 
    Antarctica melted over thousands of years it would raise sea levels by 57 
    metres, drowning many of the world's biggest cities and many low-lying 
    islands.
 
 "We've seen a much quicker rate of thinning over the last few decades and 
    we're wondering if that's going to continue or if it will slow down," the 
    British Antarctic Survey's Joanne Johnson said of the West Antarctic 
    glaciers.
 
 "It's possible that there may have been some very fast periods of thinning 
    in the past," Johnson, who was lead author of a study, told Reuters.
 
 "We don't have the data to know," she said, adding that scientists were 
    worried that "the acceleration seems to be increasing." Scientists at 
    Britain's Durham University and Germany's Alfred Wegener Institute also took 
    part.
 
 Mike Bentley from the University of Durham said "when rocks are left high 
    and dry by thinning glaciers they are exposed to high energy cosmic rays 
    which bombard the rocks."
 
 "This creates atoms of particular elements that we can extract and measure 
    in the laboratory -- the longer they have been exposed the greater the 
    build-up of these elements," he said in a statement.
 
 
 Story by Alister Doyle, Environment Correspondent
 
 
 REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 
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