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December
11, 2006
NASA PROVIDES NEW
PERSPECTIVES ON THE EARTH'S CHANGING ICE SHEETS
It's widely documented that
climate change is causing the Greenland
and
Antarctic ice sheets to shrink. Air temperatures in many parts of the
polar regions
have increased and waters that surround parts of the ice sheets have
warmed up.
What most do not know is that until just six years ago, we had no real
way of
measuring whether the ice sheets were shrinking or growing, or at what
rate.
Today, advances in remote sensing,
the use of highly sensitive instruments aboard satellites and aircraft,
have
enabled scientists to examine the mass balance of the ice sheets and to
determine just where and how quickly the ice is growing or shrinking.
Of
particular importance is the mass balance of the ice sheet, which is
the
difference between how much ice it has lost versus gained over a period
of
time, and is a direct measure of an ice sheet's contribution to sea
level rise.
With increases in the number of ways researchers can now measure
changes in the
landscape and rate of change of the ice sheets, have also come some
variations
in scientific results that some may find confusing. However, a closer
look
tells a fairly consistent story.
"The media has reported a lot about how ice is changing, particularly
in Greenland, but
the numbers vary depending on the time
period examined and the technique used. As a result, there may be some
confusion out there about what's really happening," said Waleed
Abdalati,
a glacier expert and head of the Cryospheric Sciences Branch at NASA's
Goddard
Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. "We have all these techniques and
some
are giving different answers than others. But what's significant is
that we
have the ability to even debate ice sheet measurement results at all
when we
could not have a few years ago. Now, we're talking about how much ice
sheet
shrinkage there is and how rapidly it's taking place."
Researchers now use aircraft altimetry, satellite radar and laser
altimetry,
radar interferometry, gravity measurements from NASA's Gravity Recovery
and
Climate Experiment (GRACE) mission and precise elevation change
measurements
from NASA's Ice, Cloud, and Land Elevation (ICESat) satellite. Each
tool has
its own strengths, and when used together, these technologies produce a
comprehensive look into the ice sheets' behavior that have changed the
way the
world thinks of climate change and its impact on ice sheets and
glaciers.
Each of these provides important
information for unraveling the behavior of the ice sheets, and
collectively
they tell a story. In Greenland,
they reveal
an ice sheet that is shrinking dramatically at the edges and growing at
its
higher interior elevations, such that there is a net loss of ice that
is far
greater than it was in the last decade. These losses are a result of
increased
melting, and faster flow at the edges, as the floating ice that
surrounds parts
of Greenland and
buttresses some of the outlet
glaciers melts.
In Antarctica,
these observations tell us that
the West Antarctic ice sheet is currently shrinking substantially, and
has been
for the last decade. They also tell a story of a second much larger ice
sheet
in East Antarctica
that has been growing
slowly. The net result in Antarctica is that the ice sheet as a whole
has been
shrinking, contributing to rising sea levels, and probably much more so
in
recent years.
"We did not appreciate in the past how the changes in ice sheets
respond
so quickly to changes in climate. The story these measurement
techniques are
all telling is that the ice sheets are shrinking more than they were 10
years
ago," said Abdalati. "The borders of the ice sheets are melting in
waters that are warming."
"Of the techniques for measuring ice sheet change, the laser altimetry
approach
of the ICESat mission is the most effective because it provides a
detailed look
at the overall integrated changes in the ice sheets," offered Abdalati.
"And continuous observations like those by ICESat would greatly enhance
our ability to understand what's really happening to the Earth's
dramatically
changing ice cover. The most telling comprehensive picture, however, is
created
when all the techniques are used together."
For
more information and images, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/greenland.html
For more
information
about climate
change
research on the mass balance of ice sheets,
visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/greenland_slide.html
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/news.cfm?release=2006-028
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/environment/ice_sheets.html
Writer: Gretchen Cook-Anderson, NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center
##
Contact:
Rob Gutro
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
301-286-4044
Robert.J.Gutro@nasa.gov
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/greenland.html
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