Greetings! [ Log in ] [ Register ] [ Intranet ] [ Manage Mailing Lists Subscriptions ]
  • Home
  • About Ocean Leadership
    • From the President's Office
    • Staff Directory
    • Mission
    • Board of Trustees
    • Membership
    • Employment, Internships and Opportunities
    • Visiting
    • History
  • News & Resources
    • Events Calendar
    • Press Releases
    • News Archive
    • Newsletters & Program Updates
    • Publications
    • Resources for Scientists
    • Requests for Proposals
    • SCAMPI
    • Glossary of Acronyms
    • Ocean Leadership Logos and Style Guide
  • Multimedia
    • Videos
    • YouTube
    • Photos
    • Podcasts
    • Podcasts on iTunes
  • Programs & Partnerships
    • Scientific Ocean Drilling
    • Ship Conversion
    • Ocean Observing
    • Census of Marine Life
    • National Oceanographic Partnership Program
    • U.S. Science Support Program
    • Friends of NOAA
  • Education
    • Marine Geoscience Leadership Symposium
    • Deep Earth Academy
    • Diversity
    • National Ocean Sciences Bowl
    • Ocean Sciences Educators Retreat
  • Ocean Policy & Legislation
    • Science Funding
    • Ocean Governance
    • Ocean Education
    • Climate Change
    • Ocean Leadership Priorities
    • Energy & Mineral Resources
    • Ocean & Coastal Management
    • Ocean Exploration & Observation
    • Marine Conservation
    • Public Policy Forum
    • Legislative Tracker
    • Policy 101
  • Meetings & Workshops
    • Travel Support

Home » Discovery » Greenland's Ice Sheet Melting Faster than Ever

Greenland's Ice Sheet Melting Faster than Ever

Posted by Will Ramos on Monday, November 16th, 2009 at 3:33 pm
Filed under: Discovery, News & Resources
(Click to enlarge image) The dimensions of this frosty giant go way beyond human imagination. The Greenland ice sheet has a surface area of some 1.7 million square kilometers and is up to three kilometers thick in places. (Credit: Steve Morgan)

(Click to enlarge image) The dimensions of this frosty giant go way beyond human imagination. The Greenland ice sheet has a surface area of some 1.7 million square kilometers and is up to three kilometers thick in places. (Credit: Steve Morgan)

Everyone knows that the ice sheet on Greenland is melting. But new research shows it is disappearing much faster than previously thought. The findings could mean that ocean levels are also rising more quickly.

(From Spiegel Online / by Christoph Seidler) -- The dimensions of this frosty giant go way beyond human imagination. With a surface area spanning some 1.7 million square kilometers (656,000 square miles), a view of Greenland's ice above the Sermeq-Kujalleq glacier near Ilulisat makes it seem endless. The idea that this sheet of ice, which is up to three kilometers thick in parts, is melting seems absurd in the extreme.

But the large number of gigantic icebergs -- and the valley into which they are slowly sliding -- tell a different story. Here, as elsewhere in Greenland, a gigantic upheaval is underway. In recent years, the glacier has receded by around 15 kilometers; the ongoing meltdown appears unstoppable. Just how quickly Greenland's ice is melting remains a matter of some debate, but the melting ice is contributing to rising ocean levels -- with potentially dramatic consequences for millions across the globe.

Were Greenland to lose all of its ice, sea levels would rise some seven meters higher than today's levels. Such a scenario will not become reality overnight -- indeed the process could last hundreds of years. But new results from a team of Dutch researchers suggest that conservative estimates as to the speed with which the ice is melting should be shelved. According to the study, the rate at which Greenland's ice is melting has accelerated substantially in recent years.

There are, strictly speaking, two parallel processes responsible for the ice's retreat. On the one hand, rising temperatures melt the ice on land while warmer ocean currents eat away at the glaciers that jut out into the ocean. A research team led by Michiel van den Broeke from the University of Utrecht reported in the most recent edition of the journal Science that the two processes are contributing equally to the disappearance of the ice sheet.

Losing Weight

(Click to enlarge image) An iceberg on Greenland's coast. If Greenland were to lose all of its ice, the global sea level would be about 7 meters higher than it is today. (Credit: Jonathan Bamber)

(Click to enlarge image) An iceberg on Greenland's coast. If Greenland were to lose all of its ice, the global sea level would be about 7 meters higher than it is today. (Credit: Jonathan Bamber)

According to the new report, Greenland lost an estimated 1,500 gigatons (one gigaton is equal to 1 billion tons) of ice from the year 2000 to 2008. "That is at the upper end of recent estimates of Greenland mass loss using various other methods," van den Broeke told SPIEGEL ONLINE. Between 2006 and 2008, the loss in weight totaled 273 gigatons per year, he said.

The scientists are convinced their results are accurate because they arrived at their numbers using two fundamentally different methods -- both of which returned the same conclusion. On the one hand, they monitored the movement of the ice which they fed into a regional computer model. For a second data source, they used the Grace observation satellites, which measure the Earth's gravitational field.

In the period between 2000 and 2008, the dwindling glaciers have been responsible for the sea level rising by an average of about half a millimeter per year. However, during the last three years of observation, the value rose to 0.75 millimeters per year. According to the researchers, these results could indicate that the sheet of ice is melting at an accelerated rate.

Reaching a Consensus

It is, of course, possible that the period of observation represents merely a phase in the ongoing melt-off -- a phase that could end. But van den Broeke does not believe this to be the case: "Since 2000, the Greenland ice sheet has been loosing mass continually and at an accelerating rate, which fits our picture of a warming world."

"The scientific community is getting closer to reaching consensus on the size of the mass loss from the Greenland ice sheet," Denmark's chief glaciologist Andrea Peter Ahlstrøm told SPIEGEL ONLINE. He praised the recent study and the scientists involved: "It is a strong team of authors indeed, lending credibility to the results." From Ahlstrøm's point of view, these recent results will also prove helpful for the next report of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change -- as they will enable scientists to describe the situation in Greenland with greater precision. In a 2007 report, the IPCC still had no accurate predictions for the fate of the gigantic mass of ice, because the scientists concerned could not agree amongst themselves.

But a lot has changed since then. This year, British researchers were able to indicate where the ice was disappearing fastest by using laser-altitude data from NASA's IceSat satellite. A team of scientists led by David Vaughan of the British Antarctic Survey assembled a total of 7 million data elements from Feb. 2003 to Nov. 2007, resulting in an image of unprecedented clarity. Almost all of Greenland's ice covered coastal regions -- in particular those in the south-east and north-west -- have seen rapidly melting ice. The scientists have especially noted the dramatic effect on fast moving outlet glaciers. Some of these effects are felt far inland as well.

'Give Us a Bit More Time'

(Click to enlarge image) The margin of the ice sheet in western Greenland: "All the signals point to a persistent loss in ice -- at a speed that would have seemed impossible to us 10 years ago. I would say that this is most certainly something the politicians need to grapple with," says Michiel van den Broeke, author of a new study on the melting of Greenland's ice. (Credit: IMAU)

(Click to enlarge image) The margin of the ice sheet in western Greenland: "All the signals point to a persistent loss in ice -- at a speed that would have seemed impossible to us 10 years ago. I would say that this is most certainly something the politicians need to grapple with," says Michiel van den Broeke, author of a new study on the melting of Greenland's ice. (Credit: IMAU)

A research team on the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise including, among others, Gordon Hamilton of the University of Maine and Fiammo Straneo of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, reported this summer that the unusually warm water in Greenland's fjords is to blame for the rapid retreat of glaciers.

Van den Broeke and his colleagues believe that not only will the ice disappear at a faster rate, but that the nature of the process will also change over time. According to the researchers, the rapid retreat of the outlet glaciers will be less important in the future, in comparison to the direct melting. Eventually, the glacier tongues will have retreated so far that the warm sea currents will no longer reach them.

It is still not clear when this might happen -- nor is it clear just how high sea levels might rise in the future. "We will use the same model to predict future Greenland mass loss, but you have to give us some time to come up with those results," van den Broeke said. To this end, the European Union last year launched a major research project called "Ice2Sea."

The researchers consider these new results to be an important signal to the climate summit in December. Many observers do not expect the meeting to bring about a particularly ambitious climate agreement -- much to the displeasure of van den Broeke: "All signs are pointing towards continued Greenland mass loss at rates we did not think possible ten years ago. Surely something to consider as a policy maker, I would say."


Related Posts:

  • ‘Cryo-egg’ to Predict Sea Levels
  • Coral Reefs Form on ‘Ancient Template’
  • Fossils ‘Record Past Sea Changes’
  • Sea Levels Spiked With Ancient Warming Event
  • Sea Level Is Rising Along US Atlantic Coast, Say Environmental Scientists
Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • Google Bookmarks
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • RSS
  • PDF

Comments are closed.

« Home | « Previous Page

Discovery »

UN Rejects Export Ban on Atlantic Bluefin Tuna

UN Rejects Export Ban on Atlantic Bluefin Tuna A U.S.-backed proposal to ban the export of Atlantic bluefin tuna prized in sushi was rejected Thursday by a U.N. wildlife meeting, with scores of developing nations joining Japan in opposing a measure they feared would devastate fishing economies.
More articles »

Understanding »

Mission San Jose Takes First at Sea Lion Bowl

Mission San Jose Takes First at Sea Lion Bowl Mission San Jose High school took home first place honors again at the Sea Lion Bowl, a regional Ocean Sciences competition held at San Francisco State University on March 6.
More articles »

Action »

Ocean Leadership 2010 Public Policy Forum

Ocean Leadership 2010 Public Policy Forum Every year, the Consortium for Ocean Leadership hosts a forum which features panels and presentations by representatives from Federal Agencies, Congress, and the ocean science community.
More articles »

Be an Ocean Leader

Subscribe via Twitter
790 Followers
Subscribe via Facebook
214 Fans
Subscribe via RSS
251 Readers
Subscribe via Email
Subscribe

Upcoming Events

  • March 18, 2010:
    • National Science Teacher Association National Conference (all day)
  • March 22, 2010:
    • Challenges and Opportunities in Academic Marine Seismology (all day)
  • April 29, 2010:
    • OOI Science Community Workshop: April 29-30, 2010 (all day)
  • May 3, 2010:
    • Offshore Technology Conference (all day)
  • May 8, 2010:
    • AGU Chapman Conference on Detachments in Oceanic Lithosphere: Deformation, Magmatism, Fluid Flow, and Ecosystems (all day)
  • May 24, 2010:
    • Oceans 2010 IEEE (all day)
  • June 1, 2010:
    • PACON 2010: International Marine Science and Technology Conference – Registration is Now Open! (all day)
  • June 3, 2010:
    • The MoHole: A Crustal Journey and Mantle Quest (all day)
  • June 8, 2010:
    • MTS TechSurge Workshop - Ocean Observing: Thinking Outside the Basin (all day)
  • June 12, 2010:
    • Gordon Research Seminar (GRS) on OHH (all day)

RSS JOIDES Resolution Blog

  • 03 11 10: EPILOGUE
  • 03 07 10: "The Big Goodbye"
  • Heading Home
  • Live to the Exploratorium in San Francisco!
  • A.V.C - After the video conference
  • As the sun sets on the last part of this Expedition yet another magical sunrise
  • You think we have lots of blogs here?
  • Just look outside!
  • Blog Entry 02 18 10 No one can say that we didn’t try
  • Blog Entry 02 16 10: The Two Sides of Antarctica

Archives

UserOnline

  • 26 Users Online
  • Users: Alex Renaud, 17 Guests, 11 Bots

Recent Comments

  • Chilean marine science devastated by earthquake | Deep Sea News on University of Concepcion Oceanographic Relief Fund
  • US-Canada partnership expands innovative ocean cesearch « VENUS on US-Canada Partnership Expands Innovative Ocean Research
  • Tweets that mention Ice Is 'Rotten' in the Beaufort Sea -- Topsy.com on Ice Is 'Rotten' in the Beaufort Sea
  • Tweets that mention Discovery of Algae's Toxic Hunting Habits Could Help Curb Fish Kills -- Topsy.com on Discovery of Algae's Toxic Hunting Habits Could Help Curb Fish Kills
  • Tweets that mention NOAA Gives Navy Marine Mammal Protection Measures for Exercises off the Gulf Coast -- Topsy.com on NOAA Gives Navy Marine Mammal Protection Measures for Exercises off the Gulf Coast
  • Tweets that mention NOAA: December Global Ocean Temperature Second Warmest on Record -- Topsy.com on NOAA: December Global Ocean Temperature Second Warmest on Record
  • uberVU - social comments on NOAA Gives Navy Marine Mammal Protection Measures for Exercises off the Gulf Coast
  • Tweets that mention Make the Southern Ocean the Soundtrack to Your Work Day -- Topsy.com on Make the Southern Ocean the Soundtrack to Your Work Day
  • uberVU - social comments on Discovery of Algae's Toxic Hunting Habits Could Help Curb Fish Kills
  • Tweets that mention Make the Southern Ocean the Soundtrack to Your Work Day -- Topsy.com on Make the Southern Ocean the Soundtrack to Your Work Day

All-Time Top 10 Posts

  • More IODP Expedition 320 Whale Shark
  • New Polar Bear Rule Sent to White House
  • Tagging the Great White Shark...and a Few of His Friends
  • 13 Days of Halloween: The Flying Dutchman
  • Barcoding Endangered Sea Turtles
  • Ocean Observatories Initiative Receives Award
  • 13 Days of Halloween: Top 10 Weirdest Sea Creatures
  • Overfishing Dangerously Depleting Ocean Life
  • Marine Mammal Research Program Act Introduced in the House of Representatives
  • Could Human CO2 Emissions Cause Another PETM?

Latest Photos

photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo

Latest Video Post

IODP Expedition 318: Wilkes Land Week Report SIX

Recent Posts

  • UN Rejects Export Ban on Atlantic Bluefin Tuna
  • Sturgeon More Critically Endangered Than Any Other Group of Species
  • Petroleum Engineer
  • AGU Chapman Conference on Detachments in Oceanic Lithosphere: Deformation, Magmatism, Fluid Flow, and Ecosystems
  • The MoHole: A Crustal Journey and Mantle Quest
  • Proposed ESA Listing Changes for the Loggerhead Sea Turtle
  • Shark Fin Soup Demand Feeding Extinctions
  • VEMCO VR4-Global Prototype Receivers Deployed Off Western Australian Beaches
  • Registration Now Open For Small Sea Changes: BIG California Impacts Workshop
  • Mission San Jose Takes First at Sea Lion Bowl

Popular This Month

  • More IODP Expedition 320 Whale Shark
  • Plastic Rubbish Blights Atlantic Ocean
  • New Polar Bear Rule Sent to White House
  • 13 Days of Halloween: The Flying Dutchman
  • Tagging the Great White Shark...and a Few of His Friends
  • Barcoding Endangered Sea Turtles
  • Ocean Leadership 2010 Public Policy Forum
  • ONW: Week of March 1, 2010 - Number 82
  • Overfishing Dangerously Depleting Ocean Life
  • University of Concepcion Oceanographic Relief Fund

RSS Latest from ScienceDaily

  • Obesity and passive smoking reduce oxygen supply to unborn baby
  • Genes linked to ulcerative colitis identified
  • Dogs likely originated in the Middle East, new genetic data indicate
  • Chemists influence stem-cell development with geometry
  • High Arctic species on thin ice
  • Smoking, but not past alcohol abuse, may impair mental function, study suggests
  • Anti-obesity drugs unlikely to provide lasting benefit, according to scientists
  • Potent radiation treatment provides tumor control for patients with inoperable lung cancer
  • Fast growing primitive black holes discovered
  • Prescribed burns may help reduce US carbon footprint
Web design by Will Ramos | © Copyright Consortium for Ocean Leadership 2007-2009. All Rights Reserved. | 42 queries in 4.122 seconds.