Greenland ice sheet is safer than scientists previously believed
January 27th, 2011 - 4:09 pm ICT by ANILondon, Jan 27 (ANI): Scientists have suggested that hotter summers may not be as catastrophic for the Greenland ice sheet as previously feared and may actually slow down the flow of glaciers.
Their study explains how increased melting in warmer years causes the internal drainage system of the ice sheet to ‘adapt’ and accommodate more melt-water, without speeding up the flow of ice toward the oceans.
The Greenland ice sheet covers roughly 80 percent of the surface of the island and contains enough water to raise sea levels by 7 metres if it were to melt completely.
Rising temperatures in the Arctic in recent years have caused the ice sheet to shrink, prompting fears that it may be close to a ‘tipping point’ of no return.
Some of the ice loss has been attributed to the speed-up of glaciers due to increased surface melting. Each summer, warmer temperatures cause ice at the surface of the sheet to melt. This water then runs down a series of channels to the base of the glacier where it acts as a lubricant, allowing the ice sheet to flow rapidly across the bedrock toward the sea.
“It had been thought that more surface melting would cause the ice sheet to speed up and retreat faster, but our study suggests that the opposite could in fact be true,” said lead author Professor Andrew Shepherd from the University of Leeds School of Earth and Environment.
The researchers used satellite observations of six landlocked glaciers in south-west Greenland, acquired by the European Space Agency, to study how ice flow develops in years of markedly different melting.
Although the initial speed-up of ice was similar in all years, slowdown occurred sooner in the warmest ones. The authors suggest that in these years the abundance of melt-water triggers an early switch in the plumbing at the base of the ice, causing a pressure drop that leads to reduced ice speeds.
The research was published in Nature on 27 January. (ANI)
- Believe it or not - glaciers are growing! - Jan 28, 2011
- Short-term weather extremes, not warming, driving Greenland ice sheet flow: Study - Dec 09, 2010
- Melting of Greenland's glaciers much more complex than previously imagined - Dec 17, 2009
- Greenland ice sheet melted at record rates in 2010 - Jan 22, 2011
- Alarm bells over Greenland ice melt - Oct 26, 2011
- How heat is transported to Greenland glaciers - Mar 29, 2011
- Water flowing through ice sheets speeds up warming - Nov 04, 2010
- Greenland ice melted more than Antartica's - Aug 01, 2011
- Water flowing into Arctic warmest in 2,000 years - Feb 01, 2011
- Melting glaciers to contribute 12cm to world sea-level increases by 2100 - Jan 11, 2011
- Hot season triggers 100 bn tonnes Greenland ice loss - Dec 11, 2011
- Melting glaciers on Arctic islands play major role in rise of sea level - Apr 21, 2011
- Melting ice in Canadian Arctic bigger player in sea-level rise - Apr 22, 2011
- Antarctic ice shelf faces threat from warm waters - May 10, 2012
- Mountain glacier melt-off to raise sea level by 12 cm by 2100 - Jan 11, 2011
Tags: 27 january, andrew shepherd, bedrock, drainage system, european space agency, glaciers, greenland ice sheet, initial speed, internal drainage, leeds school, london jan, lubricant, point of no return, professor andrew, satellite observations, sea levels, slowdown, tipping point, university of leeds, west greenland