Unprecedented
ice loss in Russian ice cap – “We’ve never seen anything like
this before, this study has raised as many questions as it has
answered”
11
October, 2018
18
September 2018 (CIRES) – In the last few years, the Vavilov Ice Cap
in the Russian High Arctic has dramatically accelerated, sliding as
much as 82 feet a day in 2015, according to a new multi-national,
multi-institute study led by CIRES Fellow Mike Willis, an assistant
professor of Geology at CU Boulder. That dwarfs the ice's previous
average speed of about 2 inches per day and has challenged
scientists' assumptions about the stability of the cold ice caps
dotting Earth's high latitudes.
“In
a warming climate, glacier acceleration is becoming more and more
common, but the rate of ice loss at Vavilov is extreme and
unexpected,” said Mike Willis, CIRES Fellow and lead author of the
paper published this week in Earth and Planetary Science Letters.
Glaciers
and ice caps like Vavilov cover nearly 300,000 square miles of
Earth’s surface and hold about a foot of potential sea-level rise.
Scientists have never seen such acceleration in this kind of ice cap
before, and the authors of the new paper wrote that their finding
raises the possibility that other, currently stable ice caps may be
more vulnerable than expected.
For
the new assessment, researchers played the part of forensic ice
detectives, piecing together the ice cap’s deterioration by spying
on the advancing ice with remote sensing technology from a
constellation of satellites operated by DigitalGlobe Inc,
headquartered in Westminster, Colorado.The project also relied on
support from the National Science Foundation and the National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, which funded the development of
high-resolution topographic maps of the Arctic.
By
satellite, they watched ice on the cap creep slowly forward for
several years, before it accelerate slowly in 2010, surging rapidly
forward in 2015. The initial very slow advance is thought to have
been caused by a shift in the direction of precipitation that
occurred about 500 years ago. Before this time snow and rain came
from the southeast, after this time rain and snow came from the
southwest. As the western part of the ice cap advanced into the ocean
the ice surged forward.
“Cold”
ice caps, like Vavilov, occur in polar “deserts” with very little
precipitation, and they’re normally frozen to their beds, flowing
only due to bending of the ice under the force of gravity. With beds
above sea level, they are normally insulated from the kinds of
changes that have hit glaciers in less frigid regions: melting from
below by warm sea water, for example, or sliding faster when warm
surface meltwater drains to the bed of the ice.
Researchers
suspect the ice cap began to dramatically advance when the bottom of
the ice cap became wetter and the front of the glacier advanced onto
very slippery marine sediments. The ice began to speed up, and
friction caused some of the ice underneath the glacier to melt, which
supplied more water to the bottom of the ice, reducing friction,
which caused the ice to speed up, which in turn, again produced more
water. Some of this water might have combined with clay underneath
the glacier, reducing the friction beneath the glacier even further
and allowing the truly extraordinary sliding speeds to occur.
By
2015, the sediments and rock at the bed beneath the ice had become so
slippery that the material couldn’t stop the ice from flowing. It
took just two years for the ice cap base to reach that tipping point,
transforming into a near frictionless zone, which is well-lubricated
and highly mobile. The glacier continues to slide today at
accelerated speeds of 5-10 meters per day.
The
Vavilov Ice Cap thinned by a total of a few meters, advanced about 2
km, and lost about 1.2 km3 in total volume into the ocean in the 30
years before the speedup. In the one year between 2015 and 2016, the
ice advanced about 4 kilometers and thinned by about 100 meters (~0.3
m per day). The ice cap lost about 4.5 km3 of ice, enough to cover
Manhattan with about 250 feet of water, or the entire state of
Washington with an inch. And it’s unlikely the ice cap will ever be
able to recover ice mass in today’s warming climate, the paper
states.
Many
scientists have assumed that polar ice caps that sit above sea level
will only respond slowly to a warming climate—but the authors of
this study urge that this assumption be questioned. The rapid
collapse of the Vavilov Ice Cap has significant ramifications for
glaciers in other polar regions, especially those fringing Antarctica
and Greenland.
“We’ve
never seen anything like this before, this study has raised as many
questions as it has answered.” said Willis. “And we’re now
working on modeling the whole situation to get a better handle of the
physics involved.”
Timeline
of Events
1952-1985:
Western region of the Vavilov Ice Cap in Russia advances about 400
meters (~12 m per year.)
1996:
The fastest ice on the ice cap moves about 20 meters per year (5 cm a
day).
1998-2011:
Rate of ice advance increased significantly to about 75 m per year.
2010:
The ice in the western region of the ice cap begins to accelerate
more dramatically.
2011:
Scientists observed crevasses in the ice cap, signaling further
acceleration.
2013:
The glacier spreads out into the ocean and starts to speed up to
about 2 or 3 meters per day. Not much thinning is seen inland.
2014:
The ice continues to push in to the ocean and speeds up to about 6
meters per day by the end of the summer. Not much thinning is seen
inland.
2015:
The glacier reaches a top speed of about 25 meters per day (~9125 m
per year) and a wave of thinning starts to move inland.
2015-2016:
The ice cap advances more than 4000 m in 12 months, sustains
extraordinary speeds and thinning of more than 100 meters migrates
inland.
2017:
While slower than 2015 and 2016, Vavilov continues to slide at
accelerated speeds of a few meters per day.
This
work was partly supported by NASA, the Ministry of Education, Taiwan,
Polar Geospatial Center at the University of Minnesota
(www.arcticdem.org), NSF, and UK National Environment Research
Council. In 2015, The National Science Foundation announced it was
working with the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency to support
the development of high-resolution topographic maps of the Arctic to
provide the first consistent coverage of the entire globally
significant region, including Alaska. In 2016, NSF and NGA publicly
released the Alaska maps in support of a White House Arctic
initiative to inform better decision-making in the Arctic.
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