© 2025. The Trustees of Indiana University
Copyright Complaints
1229 East Seventh Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405
News, Arts and Culture from WFIU Public Radio and WTIU Public Television
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
Some web content from Indiana Public Media is unavailable during our transition to a new web publishing platform. We apologize for the inconvenience.

Denman Glacier: Assessing The Threat

Global warming continues to threaten glaciers in Antarctica. (NASA)
Global warming continues to threaten glaciers in Antarctica. (NASA)

Melting glaciers in West Antarctica might collapse due to the effects of human-caused global climate change, but there are also risks in Antarctica's eastern part.

Earth scientists used to think that the glaciers in eastern Antarctica were more stable, but as they've studied them more carefully, they're not so sure anymore.

In 2020 an international team of researchers reported new results on Denman glacier in eastern Antarctica.  They analyzed data obtained with satellite radar systems.

They found that the glacier has retreated nearly three miles due to melting over the last 22 years. That amounts to a loss of 268 billion tons of ice. But that wasn’t the most important finding. 

Radar can penetrate the ice and map the terrain underneath. The researchers were most interested in the terrain under the glacier’s grounding zone; the point where ice leaves the land and begins to float on the ocean.  Under the western flank of the grounding zone of Denman glacier they found something that worried them; a trough much deeper than previously thought extending two miles below sea level, and getting deeper further beneath the ice sheet.

If there’s a deepening trough, and this glacier retreats inland, more and more ice will be exposed to the water that is melting it. Denman glacier drains a large part of the ice sheet, and if this part of the ice sheet melted, researchers estimate that the amount of water released would raise global sea levels by almost five feet.

Reviewer: Robert McKay, the University of Wellington, New Zealand

Sources and Further Reading

  • V. Brancato et. al. 2020, Grounding line retreat of Denman Glacier, East Antarctica, Measured with COSMO-SkyMed radar interferometry data, Geophysical Research Letters, 47, e2019GL086291.
  • Morlighem, et al. 2020, Deep glacial troughs and stabilizing ridges unveiled beneath the margins of Antarctic ice sheet, Nature Geoscience, 13: 132-137.

 

 

D:        Yaël, we’ve talked about the risk that melting glaciers in West Antarctica might collapse due to the effects of human-caused global climate change.  But, what about Antarctica’s eastern part?

Y:        Earth scientists used to think that the glaciers in eastern Antarctica were more stable, Don. But as they’ve studied them more carefully, they’re not so sure any more.  In 2020 an international team of researchers reported new results on Denman glacier in eastern Antarctica.  They analyzed data obtained with satellite radar systems.

D:        What did they find?

Y:        They found that the glacier has retreated nearly three miles due to melting over the last twenty-two years. That amounts to a loss of two hundred and sixty eight billion tons of ice. But that wasn’t the most important finding.  Radar can penetrate the ice and map the terrain underneath. The researchers were most interested in the terrain under the glacier’s grounding zone; the point where ice leaves the land and begins to float on the ocean.  Under the western flank of the grounding zone of Denman glacier they found something that worried them; a trough much deeper than previously thought extending two miles below sea level, and getting deeper further beneath the ice sheet.

D:        I think I see why they were worried.  If there’s a deepening trough, and this glacier retreats inland, more and more ice will be exposed to the water that is melting it.

Y:        That’s right.  And Denman glacier drains a large part of the ice sheet, and if this part of the ice sheet melted, researchers estimate that the amount of water released would raise global sea levels by almost five feet.

Stay Connected
Walker Rhea has a B.A. in Comparative Literature from Indiana University. In addition to reading and writing about science, he enjoys performing live comedy in Bloomington, IN and studying dead languages.