The Arctic’s biggest ice rack has actually removed a 113 km2 location. The last couple of years have actually been exceptionally cozy in northeast Greenland and also this seems a modern fragmentation.
Annual end-of-melt-season location modifications for the Arctic’s biggest ice rack in Northeast Greenland are determined from optical satellite images, and also it reveals that the location losses for the previous 2 years (year 2018/2019 and also year 2019/2020) both went beyond 50 km2. In amount to a location almost two times that of Manhattan Island,New York In the study duration because 1999, the ice rack has actually shed 160 km2.
“We should be very concerned about what appears to be progressive disintegration at the Arctic’s largest remaining ice shelf, because upstream it is the only major Greenland ice sheet ice stream, draining 16 % of the inland ice reservoir,” claims Professor Jason Box from The Geological Survey of Denmark and also Greenland (GEUS).
The Northeast Greenland Ice Stream expands 600 kilometres right into the inside of the ice sheet draining pipes mostly with both electrical outlet glaciers Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier and also Zachariae Glacier, when Zachariae shed its ice rack, 2002-2015 complied with by a huge boost in ice loss by calving procedures. Now, for 2 successive years, the ice rack of Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier is degenerating at comparable prices.
Not unusual
Dr Niels J. Korsgaard, scientist at The Geological Survey of Denmark and also Greenland (GEUS), discusses that when an ice rack is lowered or entirely falls down, resistance of ice circulation to the sea is likewise lowered making the glaciers increase and also slim.
“When you observe large parts of an ice shelf breaking off you do raise an eyebrow, but with current developments in the Arctic there is also the realization that this is to be expected,” Niels J. Korsgaard claims and also proceeds:
“Temperatures in the Arctic are rising faster than the global average. More heat is available from air and ocean to melt away the bottom and surface of ice shelves, and the thinning ice shelves are more susceptible to breaking up. We saw this with Zachariae Glacier, this summer with Milne Ice Shelf in Canada, and now Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier is losing parts of its ice shelf as well.”
Acceleration atNioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier
Dr Anne Solgaard, scientist at The Geological Survey of Denmark and also Greenland (GEUS) discusses that glacier rates originated from a series of satellites reveals a substantial velocity at the Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier over the previous years.
“Using almost 30 years of satellite data, we see speed up in the glacier flow over the past decade. It is not only near the current disintegration, but we measure acceleration 80 km upstream where the ice begins to float, indicating a large-scale change to this huge glacier,” claims Anne Solgaard.
The environment link
Dr Jenny Turton, scientist at FAU, Germany, that is examining the effect of a transforming environment on the glacier claims:
“The last few years have been incredibly warm in northeast Greenland. We had very early melt onset in 2019 linked to the heatwave across Europe and Greenland.”
Observations from neighborhood PROMICE.dk climate terminals suggest constantly above ordinary air temperature levels driving extensive thaw problems the previous 2 years.
“The atmosphere in this region has warmed by approximately 3°C since 1980 and record-breaking temperatures have been observed in 2019 and 2020”, claims Jenny Turton.
She discusses that warmer summertimes imply much more melting of the glacier and also ice sheet.
“Each summer, water drains from the Greenland ice sheet onto the tongue of the glacier, forming rivers and ponds on the surface. Refreezing of the water in winter creates additional pressure on the floating tongue, which can lead to calving events.”
The cozy climate likewise suggests that the sea ice along the eastern coastline of Greenland is separating and also melting. Sea ice can create an obstacle to keep back the glacier ice, so in years with much less sea ice, calving can take place.
Reference: eng.geus.dk