Ten
Cubic Kilometers of Ice Lost From Jakobshavn Glacier in Less than One
Month
6
June, 2014
How
large is a cubic kilometer? Think of something the size of a
mountain. Now multiply that by ten and you end up with a veritable
mountain range. Think of it. An entire mountain range of ice. That’s
a good rough comparison to the volume of ice lost from just a single
Greenland glacier over the course of a mere 26 days from May 7 to
June 1 of 2014.
(Massive ice loss from Jakobsbavn glacier captured by Espen Olsen. Image source: The Arctic Ice Blog.)
For
according to reports from expert sea ice observer Espen over at the
scientist and ice researcher camp that is Neven’s Arctic Ice Blog,
about 7.5 square kilometers over an ice face about 1,300 meters tall
(when including the above and below sea level ice front) shoved off
from the great Jakobshavn Ibrae glacier during the past month. It was
a period of time well before peak Greenland warming and one that
featured a collapse of ice into the heating ocean even larger than
the epic event caught on film during the seminal documentary Chasing
Ice.
The
Fastest Glacier in Greenland
Flowing
at a speed of 46 meters per day, Jakobshavn is currently Greenland’s
fastest glacier. Containing enough ice to raise global sea levels by
1.5 feet all by itself, the glacier is one of many of the Earth’s
ice giants currently in the throes of irreversible decline.
Human-warmed
subtropical Atlantic waters are funneled by ocean currents to the
great glacier’s base. There, the high heat capacity does serious
harm to the its weak underbelly, resulting in what is now an
unprecedented seaward surge.
Since
the 1990s, Jakobshavn’s forward rate of motion has tripled. But
according to recent scientific reports, the glacier may just be at
the start of an exponential spike in velocity. For as the glacier
retreats it falls into a deepening chasm that exposes its front to
greater and greater volumes of the warming ocean’s waters. The warm
waters deliver more heat over the glacial face as it deepens even as
a multiplication of melt lakes on the surface of the inland ice
provide added lubrication and buoyancy to the ice base flowing into
the chasm.
(Greenland map showing location of the Jakobshavn Glacier with close view of a deep channel in the bedrock. This channel was likely carved by previous discharge and at its deepest point is now more than 1,000 meters below sea level. Image source: NASA’s Earth Observatory.)
Estimates
of energy transfer from the warming ocean show that Jakobshavn could
reach a speed ten times 1990s values over the coming years.
Ominously, the past two month’s immense calving event has shoved a
large section of glacier closer to what could best be described as a
high velocity melt chamber.
Greenland
— An Archipelago Covered in Ice
Unfortunately,
Jakobshavn is just one of Greenland’s many giant glaciers fronting
deep and long chasms stretching far into the ice interior. Recent
research from NASA’s Ice Bridge project revealed numerous deep
rifts plunging for scores of miles into the ice sheet. The
overall picture portrayed by the new study was that of an archipelago
island system locked in the grip of two mile high ice mountains and
riddled with deep bedrock canyons that join in a low-lying interior
basin. A geography in which there is almost nowhere for ice to hide
from the severe melting stress of Earth’s human-warmed oceans.
Due
to this uniquely vulnerable topography lead Ice Bridge researcher
Mathieu Morlighem, a UC Irvine associate project scientist concluded
that:
“The
glaciers of Greenland are likely to retreat faster and farther inland
than anticipated – and for much longer – according to this very
different topography we’ve discovered beneath the ice. This has
major implications, because the glacier melt will contribute much
more to rising seas around the globe.”
Human
Warming Holds Numerous Large Glacial Collapses in Store
Under
the current regime of human-caused climate change, the past month’s
massive glacial release is likely only to be one of many. A single
event of immense scale that defies imagining. Just one in an ongoing
series of violent outbursts we’ve already set lose on our world.
An
event of smaller, though still enormous, size was captured on film
here:
(Largest
glacial calving event captured on film as excerpted from the
ground-breaking documentary ‘Chasing
Ice.’)
It
is a film that gives us some small measure of understanding of what
we’ve done and what we continue to to do. For
Greenland’s entire ice edge, a region unlocking ice twenty times
the volume of Jakobshavn, is now in the process of deformation and
collapse all while the massive glaciers of West
Antarctica are also falling into irreversible release.
Links:
(Hat-tip
to Colorado Bob)
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