The Pine Island Glacier is one of the largest in West Antarctica. The glacier loses 45 billion tonnes of ice to the ocean each year - equivalent to one millimeter of global sea level rise every eight years.
The single glacier alone contains 1.7 feet of potential global sea level rise and is thought to be in a process of unstable, ongoing retreat.
Stef Lhermitte, a satellite observation specialist at Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, posted a satellite image showing that Pine Island had broken off a piece of ice about 266 square kilometres in area.
"It is the fifth large calving event since 2000. This one and 2015, they were much further inland than the previous ones. So there has been a retreat of the calving front, specifically between 2011 and 2015," Lhermitte said.
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Researchers at NASA and with another team of scientists studying Pine Island of Ohio State University in the US also confirmed the findings, 'The Washington Post' reported.
Last year, researchers had found that Pine Island Glacier developed a new way of losing ice, with rifts forming in the center of its floating ice shelf from beneath, rather than at the sides, the traditional manner.
"We predicted that the rifting would result in more frequent calving, which is what's happening here. If new rifts continue to form progressively inland, the significance to ice shelf retreat would be high," said Ian Howat of Ohio State University.