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How the ocean is gnawing away at glaciers by Staff Writers Bremerhaven, Germany (SPX) Feb 04, 2020
The Greenland Ice Sheet is melting faster today than it did only a few years ago. The reason: it's not just melting on the surface - but underwater, too. AWI researchers have now found an explanation for the intensive melting on the ice's underside, and published their findings in the journal Nature Geoscience. The glaciers are melting rapidly: Greenland's ice is now melting seven times faster than in the 1990s - an alarming discovery, since climate change will likely intensify this melting in the future, causing the sea level to rise more rapidly. Accordingly, researchers are now working to better understand the underlying mechanisms of this melting. Ice melts on the surface because it is exposed to the sun and rising temperatures. But it has now also begun melting from below - including in northeast Greenland, which is home to several 'ice tongues'. Each tongue is a strip of ice that has slid down into the ocean and floats on the water - without breaking off from the land ice. The longest ice tongue, part of the '79 degrees North Glacier', is an enormous 80 km long. Over the past 20 years, it has experienced a dramatic loss of mass and thickness, because it's been melting not just on the surface, but also and especially from below.
Too much heat from the ocean For the purposes of the study, the researchers conducted the first extensive ship-based survey of the ocean floor near the glacier, which revealed the presence of a two-kilometre-wide trough, from the bottom of which comparatively warm water from the Atlantic is channelled directly toward the glacier. But that's not all: in the course of a detailed analysis of the trough, Janin Schaffer spotted a bathymetric sill, a barrier that the water flowing over the seafloor has to overcome. Once over the hump, the water rushes down the back of the sill - and under the ice tongue. Thanks to this acceleration of the warm water mass, large amounts of heat from the ocean flow past the tongue every second, melting it from beneath. To make matters worse, the layer of warm water that flows toward the glacier has grown larger: measured from the seafloor, it now extends 15 metres higher than it did just a few years ago. "The reason for the intensified melting is now clear," Schaffer says. "Because the warm water current is larger, substantially more warmth now makes its way under the ice tongue, second for second."
Other regions are also affected According to Schaffer: "The readings indicate that here, too, a bathymetric sill near the seafloor accelerates warm water toward the glacier. Apparently, the intensive melting on the underside of the ice at several sites throughout Greenland is largely produced by the form of the seafloor." These findings will ultimately help her more accurately gauge the total amount of meltwater that the Greenland Ice Sheet loses every year.
Research Report: "Bathymetry constrains ocean heat supply to Greenland's largest glacier tongue"
Researchers make critical advances in quantifying methane released from the Arctic Ocean Stockholm, Sweden (SPX) Feb 03, 2020 A new study, lead by researchers at Stockholm university and published in Science Advances, now demonstrate that the amount of methane presently leaking to the atmosphere from the Arctic Ocean is much lower than previously claimed in recent studies. Methane is well known as a major contributor to global warming. Understanding the natural sources of this gas, especially in the fast-warming Arctic, is critical for understanding the future climate. Compared with the amount of methane produced b ... read more
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