Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Greenland Is Literally Cracking Apart and Flooding the World

By Brandon Specktor, Senior Writer | March 19, 2018
Greenland's lakes are draining away in hours, thanks to a vast network of fissures hidden on the ice sheet below.
Credit: Timo Lieber
Visit Greenland on the right summer day, and you could see a 12-billion-gallon lake disappear before your very eyes.

Glaciologists saw this happen for the first time in 2006, when a 2.2-square-mile (5.6 square kilometers) lake of melted ice drained away into nothing in less than 2 hours. Researchers now see such events as a regular part of Greenland's increasingly hot summer routine; every year, thousands of temporary lakes pop up on Greenland's surface as the surrounding ice melts, sit around for a few weeks or months, and then suddenly drain away through cracks in the ice sheet underneath. [Images of Melt: Earth's Vanishing Ice]

On a recent expedition, however, researchers saw an alarming new pattern behind Greenland's mysterious disappearing lakes: They're starting to drain farther and farther inland. According to a new paper published today (March 14) in the journal Nature Communications, that's because the summer lakes of Greenland drain in a "cascading" chain reaction enabled by a vast, interconnected web of cracks below the ice — and as temperatures climb, the web is getting wider.
Scientists abseil into a fracture in the ice left behind when one of Greenland's summer lakes rapidly drained.
Scientists abseil into a fracture in the ice left behind when one of Greenland's summer lakes rapidly drained.
Credit: Samuel Doyle
"Lakes that drain in one area produce fractures that cause more lakes to drain somewhere elsewhere," co-author Marion Bougamont, a glaciologist at the University of Cambridge's Scott Polar Research Institute, said in a statement. "It all adds up when you look at the pathways of water underneath the ice."

In the new paper, Bougamont and her colleagues used 3D ice-flow models and satellite images of the Greenland Ice Sheet to study this chain reaction. The authors found that when warming weather causes a single lake to drain into the underlying ice sheet, the ice flow below that lake can accelerate dramatically — up to 400 percent faster than in winter months.

As the draining water surges away from the original lake, it can destabilize other nearby ice beds. Fresh cracks form, new lakes drain and the reaction intensifies day by day. In one incident, the researchers observed 124 lakes drain in just five days. Even lakes that formed hundreds of kilometers inland, which were previously thought to be too far removed from the ice bed to drain into it, proved vulnerable to the chain-drain-reaction as new fissures in the ice formed.

This all amounts to billions of gallons of melted ice plunging below Greenland's surface every few days. Some of this water remains trapped in the ice sheet; much of it pours into the surrounding ocean.

"This ice sheet, which covers 1.7 million square kilometers [650,000 square miles], was relatively stable 25 years ago, but now loses one billion tons [900 million metric tons] of ice every day," lead author Poul Christoffersen, also from Cambridge's Scott Polar Research Institute, said in the statement. "This causes one millimeter of global sea level rise per year, a rate which is much faster than what was predicted only a few years ago."

According to a 2017 report, ice loss in Greenland was responsible for about 25 percent of global sea level rise in 2014 — up from just 5 percent in 1993. 

If Greenland melts completely, it could result in a global sea-level rise of about 20 feet (6 meters). According to the Cambridge researchers, a total loss of Greenland's ice is "extremely unlikely in this century" — but even minor increases in sea level could have severe consequences around the world, the authors noted. According to a recent report from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), if sea levels rise half a meter (1.6 feet) by 2100, many American coastal cities will experience high-tide flooding "every other day" or more.
Originally published on Live Science.
Thanx  Brandon Specktor
Knight Jonny  C .

7 comments:

  1. Howdy my precious son ,
    I am very happy the Knights want to tell the world what is affecting the Earth maybe they will wake up and smell the daisies before it's too late , drought will cover the small specks of land that's left .
    You know my son , I do think climate change is wrecking havoc on mankind behavior , I thank it's affecting their brain cells .
    Your post is an important factor in people lives they need to look at the scientific facts ... we can slow it down and we can fix the problem .
    Great job sweetie .
    Love you so much
    Mama

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    1. I Mama ,
      There are so many things I have learn since posting on Nanook , so much involved in the process of getting people to open their eyes and ears to see and hear how they can help to slow down climate change , we found out that talking to some people is like trying to get blood out of a turnip , I always laugh when poppa said that to someone .
      We are trying to get people to look at the scientific facts I suppose there will always be doubters where science is involved .
      Thanks Mama I love you more
      Knight Jonny C.

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  2. Jonny
    I have been following this phenomenon for a few years. Greenland is right off the eastern coast of Canada. What happens there is going to happen in (Arctic) Northern Canada too. We know it is happening too fast, much faster than scientists assured us it would happen. No matter what we do now, the ice will keep on melting for decades. The leaders of the world's countries will have to take some pretty drastic measures very soon if they want to protect the ice we have left. Most people would not believe how important the ice is to the world and how dangerous it is to let it all melt away.
    This is a very good article. I wish we could find a video of one of these lakes disappearing. It must be an amazing thing to watch.
    Well done buddy
    Love you
    Aunt Jeannie

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    1. Aunt Jeannie ,
      Daddy said the Arctic is connected to Canada . The scientists was maybe on cure , mankind made it go faster by the drilling and digging for coal and cutting down the forests , we need the trees fir a very special reason , they help clean the air .
      Thank you so very much , I did not have time to look for a video , school was hectic last week because of Spring Break , Chris and I are working each day making deliveries , daddy gave me poppa's truck , we had a trailer attach to the golf cart our business picked up n now we have the truck with the trailer when needed . Easter is coming and all the people is shopping online . We have 79 families living on the compound and 9 people in the Landrieu house . Daddy told us we could not drive the truck off the compound .
      Aunt Jeannie , when you post you do not have to put your post on the bottom of ours , post them as you finish that would only be fair.
      Thank you very much
      Love you back
      Knight Jonny C.

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