Posted by
American 4 TRUTH on Friday, May 16, 2008 8:33:43 PM
Scientists know that Greenland is losing ice. Much of Greenland's ice
sheet is slow moving, creeping toward the ocean where the ice can calve
off as icebergs. The landscape is also dumps ice into the ocean through
outlet glaciers – rivers of ice that channel through valleys of bedrock
and move at least 10 times faster than the ice sheet. Whether or not
summertime melt has a significant influence on the speed of these flows
has been an endless topic of debate among scientists – until now.
"For years people have said that the increasing length and intensity of
the melt season in Greenland could yield an increase in ice discharge,"
said Joughin, lead author on the paper in Science. "Greater melt in
future summers would cause ice to flow faster toward the coast and draw
down more of the ice sheet."
Scientists have used computer models to show how melt could contribute
to the observed speed up of the ice sheet. Meltwater travels through
cracks in the ice down to the base of the mile-thick ice sheet where it
forms a lubricating layer between the ice and the land. The fluid layer
then makes it easier for the ice to slip away toward the ocean. The
effect, however, had never been observed in Greenland on a large-scale,
a fact that motivated Joughin and colleagues to get a closer look.
In 2006, Joughin embarked on an expedition by airplane to locate lakes
on the ice sheet that they had identified in advance using NASA's
Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument on
NASA's Terra and Aqua satellites. The team selected two lakes full of
meltwater and set up Global Positioning System (GPS) equipment to
measure ground movement in a limited area but over frequent intervals,
every two days. They also collected data from the NASA-launched and
Canadian-owned satellite RADARSAT, which could provide similar movement
information over an area hundreds of miles wide, but could make those
measurements only every 24 days. When combined, these data helped the
researchers identify relative changes in ice movements across the
entire ice sheet.
They found that the influence of the violent draining of the lakes had
a short-lived influence on the local movement of the ice sheet. Speedup
during periods of summer were widespread across Greenland, suggesting
that the ice sheet's plumbing is composed of a drainage network that
quickly distributes the lubricating meltwater throughout the base of
the ice sheet, as opposed to the water remaining confined to a single
isolated crack.
As for the relative speed of movement across Greenland, the researchers
found that the slow-moving ice sheet saw seasonal increases in speed
ranging from 50 to 100 percent. Despite the speed up, the ice sheet
makes a relatively small contribution to ice loss compared to the
already fast-moving outlet glaciers. The fast-moving outlet glaciers,
however, are not affected as much by seasonal melt, which accounts for
a speed increase of up to 15 percent and in many cases much less.