KEY POINTS
  • An ice shelf holding a critical glacier in Antarctica could shatter within the next five years, scientists said Monday during an American Geophysical Union meeting.
  • The Thwaites Glacier, which is the size of Florida, is already responsible for about 4% of global annual sea level rise.
  • Hotter ocean temperatures are eroding the eastern ice shelf. If it breaks apart, the glacier's contribution to sea level rise could eventually increase by as much as 25%.
The Thwaites Glacier in Antarctica is seen in this undated NASA image.

An ice shelf holding a critical glacier in Antarctica could shatter within the next five years, scientists warned on Monday during an American Geophysical Union meeting.

The Thwaites Glacier is a Florida-sized sheet that's already responsible for about 4% of global annual sea level rise as it slowly melts into the ocean. But the glacier sits on an ice shelf vulnerable to failing due to newly detected fissures on its surface and a major fracture across the entire shelf, according to satellite images.