WARM OCEAN, NOT ICEBERGS, CAUSING MOST OF ANTARCTIC ICE
SHELVES' MASS LOSS
From NASA
June 13, 2013
PASADENA, Calif. -- Ocean waters melting the undersides
of Antarctic ice shelves are responsible for most of the continent's ice shelf
mass loss, a new study by NASA and university researchers has found. Scientists
have studied the rates of basal melt, or the melting of the ice shelves from
underneath, of individual ice shelves, the floating extensions of glaciers that
empty into the sea. But this is the first comprehensive survey of all Antarctic
ice shelves. The study found basal melt accounted for 55 percent of all
Antarctic ice shelf mass loss from 2003 to 2008, an amount much higher than
previously thought.
Antarctica holds about 60 percent of the planet's fresh
water locked into its massive ice sheet. Ice shelves buttress the glaciers
behind them, modulating the speed at which these rivers of ice flow into the
ocean. Determining how ice shelves melt will help scientists improve
projections of how the Antarctic ice sheet will respond to a warming ocean and
contribute to sea level rise. It also will improve global models of ocean
circulation by providing a better estimate of the amount of fresh water ice
shelf melting adds to Antarctic coastal waters.
The study uses reconstructions of ice accumulation,
satellite and aircraft readings of ice thickness, and changes in elevation and
ice velocity to determine how fast ice shelves melt and compare the mass lost
with the amount released by the calving, or splitting, of icebergs. "The
traditional view on Antarctic mass loss is it is almost entirely controlled by
iceberg calving," said Eric Rignot of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena, Calif., and the University of California, Irvine. Rignot is lead
author of the study to be published in the June 14 issue of the journal
Science. "Our study shows melting from below by the ocean waters is
larger, and this should change our perspective on the evolution of the ice
sheet in a warming climate."
Ice shelves grow through a combination of land ice
flowing to the sea and snow accumulating on their surface. To determine how
much ice and snowfall enters a specific ice shelf and how much makes it to an
iceberg, where it may split off, the research team used a regional climate
model for snow accumulation and combined the results with ice velocity data
from satellites, ice shelf thickness measurements from NASA's Operation IceBridge
-- an continuing aerial survey of Earth's poles -- and a new map of
Antarctica's bedrock. Using this information, Rignot and colleagues were able
to deduce whether the ice shelf was losing mass through basal melting or
gaining it through the basal freezing of seawater.
In some places, basal melt exceeds iceberg calving. In
other places, the opposite is true. But in total, Antarctic ice shelves lost
2,921 trillion pounds (1,325 trillion kilograms) of ice per year in 2003-2008
through basal melt, while iceberg formation accounted for 2,400 trillion pounds
(1,089 trillion kilograms) of mass loss each year.
Basal melt can have a greater impact on ocean circulation
than glacier calving. Icebergs slowly release melt water as they drift away from
the continent. But strong melting near deep grounding lines, where glaciers
lose their grip on the seafloor and start floating as ice shelves, discharges
large quantities of fresher, lighter water near the Antarctic coast line. This
lower-density water does not mix and sink as readily as colder, saltier water,
and may be changing the rate of bottom water renewal. "Changes in basal
melting are helping to change the properties of Antarctic bottom water, which
is one component of the ocean's overturning circulation," said author Stan
Jacobs, an oceanographer at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory in Palisades, N.Y. "In some areas it also impacts ecosystems
by driving coastal upwelling, which brings up micronutrients like iron that
fuel persistent plankton blooms in the summer."
The study found basal melting is distributed unevenly
around the continent. The three giant ice shelves of Ross, Filchner and Ronne,
which make up two-thirds of the total Antarctic ice shelf area, accounted for
only 15 percent of basal melting. Meanwhile, fewer than a dozen small ice
shelves floating on "warm" waters (seawater only a few degrees above
the freezing point) produced half of the total melt water during the same
period. The scientists detected a similar high rate of basal melting under six
small ice shelves along East Antarctica, a region not as well-known because of
a scarcity of measurements.
The researchers also compared the rates at which the ice
shelves are shedding ice to the speed at which the continent itself is losing
mass and found that, on average, ice shelves lost mass twice as fast as the
Antarctic ice sheet did during the study period. "Ice shelf melt doesn't
necessarily mean an ice shelf is decaying; it can be compensated by the ice flow
from the continent," Rignot said.
"But in a number of places around Antarctica, ice
shelves are melting too fast, and a consequence of that is glaciers and the
entire continent are changing as well."
[But let us not forget – Global Warming is a Myth…. No
matter what the evidence is to the contrary.]
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