The Greenland ice sheet is losing its mass faster than in previous years and making an increasing contribution to sea level rise, a study has confirmed.
Published in the journal Science, it has also given scientists a clearer view of why the sheet is shrinking.
The team used weather data, satellite readings and models of ice sheet behaviour to analyse the annual loss of 273 thousand million tonnes of ice.
Melting of the entire sheet would raise sea levels globally by about 7m (20ft).
For the period 2000-2008, melting Greenland ice raised sea levels by an average of about 0.46mm per year.
|
Professor Roger Barry
|
Since 2006, that has increased to 0.75mm per year.
"Since 2000, there's clearly been an accelerating loss of mass [from the ice sheet]," said lead researcher Michiel van den Broeke from Utrecht University in the Netherlands.
"But we've had three very warm summers, and that's enhanced the melt considerably.
"If this is going to continue, I cannot tell - but we do of course expect the climate to become warmer in the future."
In total, sea levels are rising by about 3mm per year, principally because seawater is expanding as it warms.
Sea change
Changes to the Greenland sheet and its much larger counterpart in Antarctica are subjects commanding a lot of interest within the scientific community because of the potential they have to raise sea levels to an extent that would flood many of the world's major cities.
CLIMATE CHANGE GLOSSARYSelect a term from the dropdown:
Climate change - A pattern of change affecting global or regional climate as measured by yardsticks such as average temperature and rainfall, or an alteration in frequency of extreme weather conditions. This variation may be caused by both natural processes and human activity. Global warming is one aspect of climate change. The 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report projected a sea level rise of 28-43cm during this century. But it acknowledged this was almost certainly an underestimate because understanding of how ice behaves was not good enough to make reliable projections. By combining different sources of data in the way it has, and by quantifying the causes of mass loss, the new study has taken a big step forwards, according to Roger Barry, director of the World Data Center for Glaciology at the University of Colorado in Boulder, US. "I think it's a very significant paper; the results in it are certainly very significant and new," he said. "It does show that the [ice loss] trend has accelerated, and the reported contribution to sea level rise also shows a significant acceleration - so if you multiply these numbers up it puts us well beyond the IPCC estimates for 2100." Professor Barry was an editor on the section of the IPCC report dealing with the polar regions. |
On reflection
An ice sheet can lose mass because of increased melting on the surface, because glaciers flow more quickly into the ocean, or because there is less precipitation in the winter so less bulk is added inland.
The new research shows that in Greenland, about half the loss comes from faster flow to the oceans, and the other half from changes on the ice sheet itself - principally surface melting.
The Grace satellites provide a twin eye on
gravity at the Earth's surface
|
Another analysis of satellite data, published in September, showed that of 111 fast-moving Greenland glaciers studied, 81 were thinning at twice the rate of the slow-moving ice beside them.
This indicates that the glaciers are accelerating and taking more ice into the surrounding sea.
Melting on the ice sheet's surface acts as a feedback mechanism, Dr van den Broeke explained, because the liquid water absorbs more and reflects less of the incoming solar radiation - resulting in a heating of the ice.
"Over the last 10 years, it's quite simple; warming over Greenland has caused the melting to increase, and that's set off this albedo feedback process," he told BBC News.
"Quite likely the oceans have also warmed, and it's likely that explains the [acceleration of] outlet glaciers because they're warmed from below."
Data provided over just the last few years by the Grace satellite mission - used in this study - is giving researchers a closer view of regional variations across the territory.
Grace's twin satellites map gravity at the Earth's surface in unprecedented detail; and it is now possible to tease out from the data that most of the mass is being lost in the southeast, southwest and northwest at low elevations where the air will generally be warmer than at high altitudes.
Professor Barry cautioned that the Grace mission, which has produced valuable data about Antarctica as well as Greenland, has only a further two years to run, and that no replacement is currently scheduled.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "geoengineering" group.
To post to this group, send email to geoengi...@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to geoengineerin...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering?hl=.
Suggest additions <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8329823.stm>
Glossary in full <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/8314171.stm>
The 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report projected a sea level rise of 28-43cm during this century. But it acknowledged this was almost certainly an underestimate because understanding of how ice behaves was not good enough to make reliable projections. By combining different sources of data in the way it has, and by quantifying the causes of mass loss, the new study has taken a big step forwards, according to Roger Barry, director of the World Data Center for Glaciology at the University of Colorado in Boulder, US. "I think it's a very significant paper; the results in it are certainly very significant and new," he said. "It does show that the [ice loss] trend has accelerated, and the reported contribution to sea level rise also shows a significant acceleration - so if you multiply these numbers up it puts us well beyond the IPCC estimates for 2100." Professor Barry was an editor on the section of the IPCC report dealing with the polar regions.
On reflection
An ice sheet can lose mass because of increased melting on the surface, because glaciers flow more quickly into the ocean, or because there is less precipitation in the winter so less bulk is added inland.
The new research shows that in Greenland, about half the loss comes from faster flow to the oceans, and the other half from changes on the ice sheet itself - principally surface melting.
The Grace satellites provide a twin eye on gravity at the Earth's surface
Another analysis of satellite data, published in September, showed that of 111 fast-moving Greenland glaciers studied, 81 were thinning at twice the rate of the slow-moving ice beside them.
This indicates that the glaciers are accelerating and taking more ice into the surrounding sea.
Melting on the ice sheet's surface acts as a feedback mechanism, Dr van den Broeke explained, because the liquid water absorbs more and reflects less of the incoming solar radiation - resulting in a heating of the ice.
"Over the last 10 years, it's quite simple; warming over Greenland has caused the melting to increase, and that's set off this albedo feedback process," he told BBC News.
"Quite likely the oceans have also warmed, and it's likely that explains the [acceleration of] outlet glaciers because they're warmed from below."
Data provided over just the last few years by the Grace satellite mission - used in this study - is giving researchers a closer view of regional variations across the territory.
Grace's twin satellites map gravity at the Earth's surface in unprecedented detail; and it is now possible to tease out from the data that most of the mass is being lost in the southeast, southwest and northwest at low elevations where the air will generally be warmer than at high altitudes.
Professor Barry cautioned that the Grace mission, which has produced valuable data about Antarctica as well as Greenland, has only a further two years to run, and that no replacement is currently scheduled.
---
For graphic illustration of what we're facing, I can recommend James Balog's time-lapse photography:
http://www.ted.com/talks/james_balog_time_lapse_proof_of_extreme_ice_loss.html
Cheers from Chiswick,
John
[1] RGS lectures
http://www.rgs.org/WhatsOn/London+Lectures/Monday+night+Lectures.htm
[2] Tipping points map
http://web.me.com/stewartbrand/DISCIPLINE_footnotes/Tipping_points.html
[3] Hansen on scientific reticence and sea level rise
http://www.iop.org/EJ/article/1748-9326/2/2/024002/erl7_2_024002.html
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "geoengineering" group.
To post to this group, send email to geoengi...@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to geoengineerin...@googlegroups.com <mailto:geoengineering%2Bunsu...@googlegroups.com> .
--
John Latham
lat...@ucar.edu & john.l...@manchester.ac.uk
Tel. 303-444-2429 (H) & 303-497-8182 (W)
I just saw some of John Latham's graphics (shown by John Shepherd in lecture in Oxford today) on effects of increasing marine cloud reflectance by saline droplets and the biggest insolation differentials are in the tropical oceans where you are getting 50W/m2. One idea might be to deploy the boats in the tropical / subtropical Atlantic and so reduce the temperature of the North Atlantic Drift, as it is this warm water flux that is surely doing much of the sea ice melting. This may be a necessary adjunct to directly cooling the Arctic as otherwise you are not doing any cooling in the winter when the Arctic ocean is all frozen up (still) - and in any case there is no sunshine to reflect away. Or indeed this may just a more effective approach in all seasons. Anyone up for some modelling?One further thought of Shepherd's is that you have to balance any Arctic cooling with Antarctic cooling, or run risk of N-S shift of jet stream, monsoon etc.Best, Oliver.
From: John Nissen [mailto:j...@cloudworld.co.uk]
Sent: 18 November 2009 14:32
To: Oliver Tickell
Cc: 'Veli Albert Kallio'; m.h...@uea.ac.uk; 'John Davies'; chri...@christianclot.com; 'Edward Hanna'; 'R.D. Schuiling'; John Latham; Geoengineering; P. Wadhams; Mark Serreze
Subject: Re: [geo] Greenland ice sheet - tipping in progress
Hi Oliver,
I think we should all be extremely alarmed by what Albert has said!! So a plan of action is urgently needed.
I've been talking about this with Albert, on and off, for nearly two years now. Somehow we have to stabilise the Greenland ice sheet. But if we do not save the Arctic sea ice, it is highly unlikely that we can save the Greenland ice sheet. Albert estimates that the Greenland ice sheet could become unstable within 5 years of end-summer disappearance of the Arctic sea ice. Moreover, once this end-summer disappearance has happened, it is highly unlikely that the sea ice can be restored and eventually it will be gone throughout the year.
Date: Tue, 17 Nov 2009 11:04:49 +0000
From: j...@cloudworld.co.uk
To: geoengi...@googlegroups.com
CC: john....@foe.co.uk; oliver....@kyoto2.org; m.h...@uea.ac.uk; albert...@hotmail.com
Subject: [geo] Greenland ice sheet - tipping in progress
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "geoengineering" group.
To post to this group, send email to geoengi...@googlegroups.com.
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to geoengineerin...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering?hl=.