Satellite
data shows ice sheets of Greenland and Antarctica are declining at record
speed. The annual loss of ice has doubled in the case of Greenland and tripled
in the West Antarctic compared to figures from 2009.
Deutsche Welle, 21 Aug 2014
Scientists
from the Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) in Bremerhaven mapping elevation
changes of Greenlandic and Antarctic glaciers have found ice sheets are melting
at record pace. Per year, the ice sheets dump some 500 cubic kilometers
(132,000 gallons) of ice into the oceans. The researchers say that compares to
an ice sheet that's 600 meters (1970 feet) thick and covers an area as big as
the German city of Hamburg - or the Southeast Asian nation of Singapore.
The
research team headed by Veit Helm used around two years' worth of data from the
ESA CryoSat-2 satellite to create digital elevation models of Greenland and
Antarctica. The results were published in the online magazine of the European
Geoscience Union (EGU) "The Cryosphere".
"The
new elevation maps are snapshots of the current state of the ice sheets,"
Helm said. "The elevations are very accurate, to just a few meters in
height, and cover close to 16 million square kilometers of the area of the ice
sheets." Helm says this includes an additional 500,000 square kilometers
that weren't covered in previous elevation models from altimetry.
Space
technology shows declining ice mass
Helm and
his team analyzed all data from the CryoSat-2 radar altimeter SIRAL in order to
come up with these detailed maps. The satellite with this new radar equipment
was launched in 2010. Satellite altimeters measure the height of an ice sheet
by sending radar or laser pulses which are then reflected by the surface of the
glaciers or surrounding areas of water and recorded by the satellite.
The
researchers used other satellite data as well to document how elevation has
changed between 2011 and 2014. Ice sheets gain mass through snowfall and lose
it through melting and accelerating glaciers, which carry ice from the interior
of the ice sheet to the ocean.
"We
need to understand where and to which extent the ice thickness across the
glaciers has changed. Only then can we analyze the drivers of these changes and
find out how much ice sheets contribute to global sea level rise," lead
author Helm said.
Rapid ice
loss over a short period of time
The team
used more than 200 million SIRAL data points for Antarctica and some 14 million
data points for Greenland to create the elevation maps. The results show that
Greenland alone is losing around 375 cubic kilometers of ice per year.
Compared to
data which was collected in 2009, the loss of mass from the Greenland ice sheet
has doubled. The rate of ice discharge from the West Antarctic ice sheet
tripled during the same period.
85 percent of Greenland is covered with ice - melting ice sheets contribute to rising sea levels |
"If
you combine the two, they are thinning at a rate of 500 cubic kilometers per
year. That is the highest rate observed since altimetry satellite records began
about 20 years ago," said glaciologist Angelika Humbert, who co-authored the
AWI study.
The
researchers detected the biggest elevation changes at the Jakobshavn Glacier in
West Greenland and Pine Island Glacier in West Antarctica. This corresponds
with other scientific research on both areas.
Whereas the
West Antarctic Ice Sheet and the Antarctic Peninsula, on the far west of the
continent, are rapidly losing volume, East Antarctica is gaining volume.
However, the scientists stress that this is happening at such a low rate that
it does not compensate for the losses on the other side of the continent.
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“2011 and Beyond” - What you are seeing, and why - Jan 16, 2010 (Kryon channeled by Lee Carroll) (Text version)
New Mini Ice Age
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“2011 and Beyond” - What you are seeing, and why - Jan 16, 2010 (Kryon channeled by Lee Carroll) (Text version)
New Mini Ice Age
“… So now we've refreshed that which we have said before, a review. You are in the middle of a cycle that will bring cooling to the planet. It is not a heat cycle, but rather a cooling cycle. But it always starts with a short heat cycle. It has been here before. It will come again. It is a long cycle - one generation plus five years. That's how long it's going to last. It starts with the melting of the ice caps, which is far more than any of you have seen in your lifetime or those of your ancestors. It is a cycle whose repetition is thousands of years long, but one that has not yet been recorded to the books of Human record. But it's definitely been recorded in the cores of the ice and in the rings of the trees.
Thousands of years old, it is, and it happens in a cyclical way. It's about water. It starts with that which is the melting of the ice caps to a particular degree, which has a profound effect on the planet in all ways. You can't have that happen without seeing life change as well as Gaia change and you've seeing it already. What happens when you take that which is heavy on the poles [ice] and you melt it? It then becomes cold water added to that which is a very, very gentle and finite balance of temperature in the seas of the planet (1). The first thing that happens is a redistribution of the weight of water on the thin crust of the earth from ice at the poles to new water in the seas. The results become earthquakes and volcanoes, and you're seeing them, aren't you? You are having earthquakes in places that are not supposed to have earthquakes. Volcanoes are coming to life in a way that you've not seen before on a regular basis. There will be more. Expect them.
Is it too much to ask of a Human Being that if you live by a volcano that you know might erupt, maybe you ought to move? Yet there will be those who say, "It hasn't erupted in my lifetime or my parents' lifetime or my grandparents' lifetime; therefore, it won't." You may have a surprise, for all things are changing. That is what is happening to Gaia. ….“
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