Montreal Gazette

Greenland likely losing ice faster than thought

OLD MODEL UNDERESTIM­ATED RATE OF MELTING GLACIERS

- CHELSEA HARVEY

THE MODEL WE WERE USING WAS NOT QUITE RIGHT.

Rapidly melting Greenland may be shedding its ice even faster than anyone suspected, new research suggests. A study just out in the journal Science Advances finds that previous studies may have underestim­ated the current rate of mass loss on the Greenland ice sheet by about 20 billion tonnes per year.

Generally, scientists estimate ice loss in Greenland (and elsewhere around the world) using data from satellites. But the new study suggests these satellite studies may have included some incorrect assumption­s.

The assertion revolves around a concept known as “glacial isostatic adjustment,” or the tendency of land to bounce back after a large weight of ice has been removed from it. Over the past 25,000 years or so, since the last great Ice Age, the planet’s surface has been slowly springing back into place.

An important part of this effect is driven by the flowing of the Earth’s mantle, a layer of thick, oozing rock beneath the Earth’s crust, said Michael Bevis, a geophysici­st at The Ohio State University and a co-author of the new study. When a heavy weight, such as a huge ice sheet, forms on the Earth’s surface, the resulting high pressure causes the rocky mantle to begin flowing out from underneath it. When the weight is removed, the mantle gradually begins to flow back into place.

Because satellite studies generally draw their conclusion­s about ice loss based on changes in the Earth’s surface, scientists must make correction­s to account for this effect. But the new paper suggests that our current correction methods may not be entirely accurate — at least, not for Greenland. The study points specifical­ly to the measuremen­ts yielded by the GRACE satellites, a set of twin crafts that estimate ice loss based on changes in the pull of gravity as they orbit around the Earth.

“What GRACE measures is mass change, but it can’t really tell the difference between ice mass and rock mass,” said Bevis. “So you have to give it a model. (And) the model we were using was not quite right.”

The study draws its conclusion­s using data from a network of GPS sensors placed around Greenland, which have helped detect how fast the earth there is springing back up. When they compared these estimates to some of the models that have previously been used in reconstruc­tions of Greenland’s glacial history, they found that the findings didn’t match up.

These models have typically relied on standard assumption­s about the way the Earth’s mantle flows in most parts of the world, Bevis noted. But the researcher­s suggest that millions of years ago, an especially intense region of molten rock beneath the Earth’s surface — known as a “hotspot” — changed the consistenc­y of the mantle beneath Greenland, causing it to move in different ways. This hotspot still exists, they’ve noted, but it has since migrated and currently resides beneath Iceland, where it’s been responsibl­e for the high levels of volcanic activity in that part of the world.

Without taking the influence of this hotspot into effect, the researcher­s suggest, previous models of Greenland’s behaviour were incorrect. So they created a modified model, tweaking its assumption­s about the mantle so that the results were consistent with their GPS estimates. Then, they used the modified model to create a reconstruc­tion of Greenland’s glacial history.

First, the results suggest that satellite studies have been underestim­ating the current mass loss by about 20 billion tonnes per year. This sounds like a lot, but Bevis pointed out that it’s actually a fairly modest correction, suggesting a rate of ice loss that’s only about 7.5 per cent faster than previously estimated.

But this isn’t actually the most important part of the study, Bevis said. The reconstruc­ted history was able to identify not only how much ice has been lost over the past few thousand years, but also where the losses have been coming from.

Over the past two decades, scientists have found that a relatively small set of glaciers in Greenland are responsibl­e for more than 70 per cent of the ice sheet’s total losses. The new study finds that these same regions have been contributi­ng to a hefty portion — about 40 per cent — of Greenland’s ice losses for many thousands of years.

But the study doesn’t just raise questions about Greenland. Bevis and his colleagues have pointed out that some of the same problems could exist with current estimates of ice loss in Antarctica. The problem there is that Antarctica is so much bigger than Greenland — and although a GPS network exists there as well, the sensors are spaced much farther apart, meaning it may be much more difficult to gather enough data to conduct the same type of study.

For now, though, a focus on Greenland may be the biggest priority anyway.

“Antarctica is losing ice,” Bevis said. “But Greenland is the most unstable ice sheet we have right now.”

 ?? URIEL SINAI / GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Results from a recalibrat­ed model suggest that satellite studies have been underestim­ating the current mass loss of Greenland’s ice by about 20 billion tonnes per year, according to a new study in the journal of Science Advances.
URIEL SINAI / GETTY IMAGES FILES Results from a recalibrat­ed model suggest that satellite studies have been underestim­ating the current mass loss of Greenland’s ice by about 20 billion tonnes per year, according to a new study in the journal of Science Advances.

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