The big thaw:
Greenland ice cover is melting
The vast ice sheet of Greenland, which holds enough water to raise
global sea levels by 7.2 metres, underwent a remarkable transformation
for a few days this month when scientists observed an unprecedented
melting of its frozen surface.
For the first time since satellites began recording changes to
Greenland from space more than 30 years ago, scientists observed surface
melting across almost the entire ice sheet - the second largest body of
ice after Antarctica.
At this time of the year, about half of the surface of the ice sheet
usually experiences some kind of surface melting as summer day-time
temperatures rise above freezing point.
However, scientists at the US National Aeronautics and Space
Administration (Nasa) were amazed to discover that on 11 and July 12
surface melting had extended across 97 per cent of the ice sheet - the
most widespread melting they have witnessed.
The observation comes just weeks after an iceberg twice the size of
Manhattan broke away from the Petermann glacier in northern Greenland
and other scientists recorded a rapid loss of floating sea ice further
north in the Arctic basin.
The phenomenon in Greenland was so unusual and unexpected that
researchers at Nasa's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena,
California initially could not believe what they were seeing and so
quickly sought verification from colleagues elsewhere.
"This was so extraordinary that at first I questioned the result: was
this real or was it due to a data error?" said Son Nghiem, whose job at
JPL was to analyse radar data from the Indian Space Research
Organisation's Oceansat-2 satellite.
Dorothy Hall at Nasa's Goddard Space Flight Centre in Greenbelt,
Maryland, soon supplied the verification in the form of temperature data
from two other NASA satellites. She confirmed unusually high
temperatures over the entire ice sheet, which at 1.7m square kilometres
is three times the size of Texas, or more than 16 times the size of
England.
Thomas Mote, a climatologist at the University of Georgia, then came
up with a meteorological explanation for the highly unusual observation.
A ridge of warm air, called a heat dome, has formed over Greenland.
Dr Mote said that it was in fact the latest of a series of ridges
that had dominated Greenland's weather since the end of May. "Each
successive ridge has been stronger than the previous one," he said.
What was so unusual was the extent of the melting. It was even taking
place near the highest point in Greenland, around Summit Station which
is 3.2 km (two miles) above sea level, which hardly ever melts.
In fact, according to ice cores taken from the region, the Summit of
the Greenland ice sheet has not experienced melting of this kind since
1889, according to Lora Koenig, a Nasa glaciologist at Goddard.
"Ice cores from Summit show that melting events of this type occur
once every 150 years on average.
"With the last one in 1889, this event is right on time," Dr Koenig
said.So the unprecedented melting monitored by satellites might just be
a natural event, or it could indicate more serious climate change.
"If we continue to observe melting events like this in the coming
years, it will be worrisome," Dr Koenig said.The Greenland ice sheet is
2,400 km long, 1,100 km wide, and up to 3km thick at its highest point.
The current ice sheet is believed to be 110,000 years old, but there
may have been ice sheets on Greenland for 18 million years or more.
-The Independent
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