Expanding
Antarctic Sea Ice is Flooding ‘Warning Bell’
John Upton
13
October, 2014
The
spreading sheet of sea ice around Antarctica could be viewed as a
napkin being draped over a monstrous water pistol. If, that is, the
gelid napkin was a self-assembling machine that could reach beneath
itself, aim the squirt gun at the planet’s shorelines, and squeeze
the trigger.
Research
suggests that the expansion of Antarctic sea ice heralds ocean
changes that will hasten ice sheet melting, by trapping heat beneath
a layer of cold surface water, worsening flooding around the world.
The
stunning outward
spread of ice floes atop
the seas surrounding the South Pole has been caused by cold
freshwater flowing out of melting Antarctic glaciers. (Shifting winds
may also be playing a role in the breaking
of previous Austral
sea ice records.) That melting is forming layers of unusually cold
and relatively salt-free surface waters in the region, the tops of
which are being frosted with layers of blue-white ice.
Antarctic
sea ice: Credit: NASA
Those
layers of cold water could recast the southern stretches of the
influential Atlantic
Meridional Overturning Circulation,
which ferries water between tropical and polar regions, all the way
from the Arctic to the Antarctic — with planet-churning
consequences. Recent modeling indicates that these cold-water layers
also formed as Antarctica melted during the prehistoric past, when
they blocked warm water, which gets carried by deepwater currents to
the Southern Ocean from the tropics, from surfacing.
At
the surface, that warm water normally sloughs its excess heat into
the atmosphere, cools down, then flows back north — typically a
standard feature of the Atlantic’s circulation system. Without that
Antarctic upwelling, the new study, which was published
in Nature Communications,
warns that the ice
sheet is
in danger of being melted
from beneath at
a hastening pace.
“We
found out that if you put a certain amount of freshwater into the
Southern Ocean around Antarctica, then basically it reduces this
overturning — it reduces the upwelling of that warm water,” said
the study’s lead author, Nick Golledge, a scientist at the
Victoria University of Wellington’s Antarctic Research Center in
New Zealand. “All that heat just gets trapped at a depth where it
can melt the base of the ice shelves and the grounded ice that’s
sitting in the ocean.”
Golledge
collaborated with Australian scientists to produce model simulations
of ocean circulations and changes in Antarctic ice levels during the
past 25,000 years. During that time, Earth exited its last major ice
age and great mountains of ice, particularly those in the Northern
Hemisphere, turned to water, raising sea levels by hundreds of feet.
Of special interest to Golledge was a planet-changing event of 14,000
to 15,000 years ago known as Meltwater
Pulse 1A.
That’s when oceans most rapidly invaded shorelines, with seas
rising 50 feet in just a few centuries according to one
recent estimate.
September's
record-breaking Antarctic sea ice extent.Click
image to enlarge.
Credit: NOAA
climate.gov
Golledge
wanted to know how much of a role Antarctic melting played in
Meltwater Pulse 1A, and during the similar but less significant
Meltwater Pulse 1B — and why.
He
hypothesized that the entrapment of warm ocean water beneath a layer
of cold surface water in the Southern Ocean played an important role.
Solving the riddle of whether that was actually the case could help
narrow projections of rising seas as greenhouse gases continue to
trap heat on Earth.
Some
of the researchers’ computer simulations included modeling of the
cap of cold meltwater in Antarctica; some of them excluded that cap.
They found that the only way they could cause the Antarctic ice
sheets to play a major role in the meltwater pulses in their
simulations was by allowing that surface layer of cold freshwater to
form.
For
the Antarctic ice sheet to have “contributed substantially” to
the meltwater pulses, the scientists wrote in their paper, “we find
that a specific interaction between the ice sheet and its surrounding
ocean is necessary.” The melting of the ice sheet was fastest in
the simulations “when an abrupt reduction in Southern Ocean
overturning” allowed “rapid subsurface oceanic warming to take
place.”
Antarctic
melting during Meltwater Pulse 1A was accelerated by ocean
circulation changes, modeling suggests.Click
image to enlarge. Credit: Nature
Communications
Worryingly,
Golledge says the circulation changes associated with the meltwater
pulses appear to be similar to the oceanic conditions that are
starting to form today.
“The
observational data that we have access to at the moment is showing
that similar conditions are, in some areas, beginning to get
established,” Golledge said. “This is kind of a warning bell. We
can see things happening that probably happened before, and we know
what the end game was.”
The
study, which was described by Scripps Institution of Oceanography
professor Jeffrey
Severinghaus as
“an important contribution to science,” edges forward an
important but difficult field of research. Antarctica’s future
response to global warming remains one of the biggest
and most consequential mysteries facing
climate scientists.
“There
are simply too many unknowns at present to say that this paper makes
a prediction that is useful for future flooding risks,”
Severinghaus said. “But they have proposed an interesting
hypothesis.”
Research
finds 20cm rise since start of 20th century, caused by global warming
and the melting of polar ice, is unprecedented
13
October, 2014
The
rise in sea levels seen over the past century is unmatched by any
period in the past 6,000 years, according to a lengthy analysis of
historical sea level trends.
The
reconstruction of 35,000 years of sea level fluctuations finds that
there is no evidence that levels changed by more than 20cm in a
relatively steady period that lasted between 6,000 years ago and
about 150 years ago.
This
makes the past century extremely unusual in the historical record,
with about a 20cm rise in global sea levels since the start of the
20th century. Scientists have identified rising temperatures, which
have caused polar ice to melt and thermal expansion of the sea, as a
primary cause of the sea level increase.
A
two-decade-long collection of about 1,000 ancient sediment samples
off Britain, north America, Greenland and the Seychelles formed the
basis of the research, led by the Australian National University and
published in PNAS.
The
35,000-year span of the study was chosen as this comprises an
interglacial period. Researchers could pick submerged sediments that
may include tree roots, suggesting a previously lower sea level, or
mollusks, which can be measured against the fossil record to
determine the previous sea level.
Ice
started melting about 16,000 years ago, with this melting ending
about 8,000 years ago. A slowdown in sea level changes didn’t occur
until 6,000 years ago, however.
“It’s
like if you leave a big block of ice on the table, it doesn’t melt
instantaneously, there’s always a delay in the system,” said Kurt
Lambeck, who led the research at ANU.
“We
know from the last interglacial period that when temperatures were
several degrees warmer than today there was a lot more water in the
oceans, with levels around 4 to 5m higher than today. The question is
how fast that change occurs when you increase temperatures.”
Lambeck
said the sea level increase of the past 100 years is “beyond
dispute”, backed up by separate data from salt flats and also
changes to the sea floor caused by the extra weight of water.
“What
we’ve seen is unusual, certainly unprecedented for these
interglacial periods,” he said.
“All
the studies show that you can’t just switch off this process. Sea
levels will continue to rise for some centuries to come even if we
keep carbon emissions at present day levels.
“What
level that will get to, we are less sure about. But it’s clear we
can’t just reverse the process overnight.”
These guys should be funded to go back.
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