Hundreds of iceberg earthquakes are shaking the crumbling end of Antarctica's Doomsday Glacier

Glacial earthquakes are rocking the Doomsday Glacier in Antarctica.

Thwaites Glacier Ice Tongue in West Antarctica captured by the Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission on 11 September 2019.
An image from space of Thwaites Glacier in West Antarctica, which is being hit by hundreds of iceberg quakes.
(Image credit: Copernicus / ESACC BY)

Glacial earthquakes are a special type of earthquake generated in cold, icy regions. First discovered in the northern hemisphere more than 20 years ago, these quakes occur when huge chunks of ice fall from glaciers into the sea.

Until now, only a very few have been found in the Antarctic. In a new study published in Geophysical Research Letters, I present evidence for hundreds of these quakes in Antarctica between 2010 and 2023, mostly at the ocean end of the Thwaites Glacier — the so-called Doomsday Glacier that could send sea levels rising rapidly if it were to collapse.

Thanh-Son Pham
ARC DECRA Fellow in Geophysics, Australian National University

Thanh-Son Pham uses seismic waves to understand the Earth’s interior structures and seismic energy sources, employing mathematical tools such as signal processing, numerical modeling, and geophysical inference. To date, one of his visible contributions has been to help better understand the architecture of the seismic wavefield several hours after large earthquakes and to use it to decipher several long-standing puzzles regarding the Earth’s inner core. In current and near-future research, he aims to expand his seismological toolbox to advance research on these topics, focusing on understanding the structures and dynamics of the polar ice sheets in Antarctica and Greenland under a changing climate.

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