GREENLAND ICE SHEET FLOWS FASTER DURING SUMMER MELTING
June 6, 2002
New measurements show that the flow of ice in the Greenland ice sheet
has been accelerating since 1996 during the summer melt season. The
results suggest that the ice sheet may be responding more quickly to
the warming climate than previously thought.
In an article published in Science magazine's online Sciencexpress June
7, Jay Zwally, an ICESat Project scientist at the NASA Goddard Space
Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., Waleed Abdalati, Polar Program scientist
at NASA Headquarters, Washington, and colleagues report that increases
in ice velocity during the summer are correlated with the timing and
the intensity of ice sheet surface melting.
Using periodic Global Positioning Satellite measurements from 1996 through
1999, the researchers discovered that the ice flow speeds up from 31.3
cm (12.3 inches) per day in winter to a peak of 40 cm (15.7 inches)
per day in the summer when surface melting is largest. "This study
demonstrates that surface meltwater travels quickly through the 1200
meter (approx. 3/4 mile)
thick ice to the bedrock to make the ice slide faster. This process
was known for decades to enhance the flow of small mountain glaciers,
but was not known to occur in the large ice sheets," Zwally said.
The meltwater makes its way from the surface to the bedrock by draining
into crevasses and large tunnels called moulins that may be as large
as 10 meters (approx. 33 feet) in diameter. More meltwater underneath
the ice sheet provides lubrication to allow the ice sheet to move faster
toward the coastline of Greenland.
Over time, as ice melts from the top of the ice sheet, the ice thins
and spreads out toward lower elevations closer to the coast. The meltwater
also carries heat (in the form of water) from the top of the ice to
the base of the ice that sits on the bedrock.
A separate study by Abdalati and Konrad Steffen of the University of
Colorado showed that the melting of the ice sheet surface has been increasing
at a rate of nearly 20% over the last 21 years, while summer temperatures
in that same period have increased by one quarter of a degree Celsius
(.45° Fahrenheit). The link between ice sheet melt and ice flow
suggest that the increasing melt may be more significant than previously
believed.
The faster ice flow, ice thinning and consequent lowering of the surface
elevation of the ice sheet can open a feedback to more melting that
has not been considered in computer models that predict ice sheet response
to climate change.
NASA's ICESat mission, which is planned for launch in December of this
year, will use a laser altimeter to monitor ice sheet elevations and
show elevation changes as small as 1 cm/yr. ICESat's measurements will
tell us whether the ice sheets are growing or shrinking overall, how
much they are contributing to sea level change, and will help predict
future changes in ice volume and sea level.
Zwally and his colleagues speculate that increased movement of the ice
sheet due to more meltwater underneath the ice sheet may have contributed
to the demise of the Laurentide ice sheet approximately 10,000 years
ago. During that time, the Earth's axis of rotation was more tilted
toward the Sun causing warmer summers in the Northern Hemisphere.
Further, they suggest that the observed process may also
have contributed to the extensive melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet
during the last Interglacial period, some 125,000 years ago. According
to the U.S. Geological Survey, previous studies have shown that during
the last Interglacial period, carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations in
the atmosphere were relatively high, temperatures may have been higher
than the present, and sea level may have been approximately 6 meters
(19.5 feet) higher. "During this time when the climate was warmer,
the ice sheet was less extensive. With the predicted greenhouse warming
we may be returning to similar conditions," Zwally said.
This research was funded under NASA's ICESat Project.
Contacts:
Rob Gutro
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
(Phone: 301/286-4044)
Meltwater Flowing Into a Moulin
Meltwater stream flowing into a large moulin in the ablation zone (area
below the equilibrium line) of the Greenland ice sheet. Photo Courtesy:
Roger J. Braithwaite, The University of Manchester, UK
How Greenland's Ice Sheet Melts and Moves
This schematic highlights glaciological features of the
ice sheet including surface lakes, crevasses, and large openings called
moulins, that stretch up to 10 meters in diameter and drain to the bedrock.
Meltwater descends through the moulins, down to the bedrock, contributing
to the movement of the ice sheet. The Equilibrium Line (EQ LINE), similar
to a snow line on the glacier, is at about 1200 meters elevation in
west-central Greenland. In the ablation zone below the EQ LINE, all
the winter snow plus some of the ice
flowing from higher elevations melts each summer. "GPS" is
the marker where the "Global PositioningSystem" was located
to observe the movement of the ice sheet. The "V" indicates
the velocity of the movement of the ice, some of which is from sliding
over the bedrock.
A Satellite View of the Greenland Ice Sheet
These are elevation contours (50 m or 164 feet) overlain
on a Landsat image taken on June 22, 1990, which is typically about
1/3 of the way through the melt season. The greyer areas at lower elevations
in the image are bare ice, with some whiter patches of remaining winter
snow near the ice-snow line. By the end of the melt season in late August
to early September the firn-ice (Firn is
snow that is more than one year old) boundary usually retreats to around
the average location of the equilibrium line near the Swiss Camp. The
dark patches are melt lakes, some of which show dark lines of inflow
channels. Later in the season, melt lakes also form above the equilibrium
line.
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