Morrow County Sentinel.com

NASA: Strange and sudden massive melt in Greenland

WASHINGTON (AP) — Nearly all of Greenland’s mas­sive ice sheet sud­denly started melt­ing a bit this month, a freak event that sur­prised scientists.

Even Greenland’s cold­est and high­est place, Sum­mit sta­tion, showed melt­ing. Ice core records show that last hap­pened in 1889 and occurs about once every 150 years.

Three satel­lites show what NASA calls unprece­dented melt­ing of the ice sheet that blan­kets the island, start­ing on July 8 and last­ing four days. Most of the thick ice remains. While some ice usu­ally melts dur­ing the sum­mer, what was unusual was that the melt­ing hap­pened in a flash and over a wide­spread area.

You lit­er­ally had this wave of warm air wash over the Green­land ice sheet and melt it,” NASA ice sci­en­tist Tom Wag­ner said Tuesday.

The ice melt area went from 40 per­cent of the ice sheet to 97 per­cent in four days, accord­ing to NASA. Until now, the most exten­sive melt seen by satel­lites in the past three decades was about 55 percent.

Wag­ner said researchers don’t know how much of Greenland’s ice melted, but it seems to be freez­ing again.

When we see melt in places that we haven’t seen before, at least in a long period of time, it makes you sit up and ask what’s hap­pen­ing?” NASA chief sci­en­tist Waleed Abdalati said. It’s a big sig­nal, the mean­ing of which we’re going to sort out for years to come.”

About the same time, a giant ice­berg broke off from the Peter­mann Glac­ier in north­ern Green­land. And the National Snow and Ice Data Cen­ter on Tues­day announced that the area filled with Arc­tic sea ice con­tin­ues near a record low.

Wag­ner and other sci­en­tists said because this Greenland-wide melt­ing has hap­pened before they can’t yet deter­mine if this is a nat­ural rare event or one trig­gered by man-made global warm­ing. But they do know that the edges of Greenland’s ice sheets have already been thin­ning because of cli­mate change.

Sum­mer in Green­land has been freak­ishly warm so far. That’s because of fre­quent high pres­sure sys­tems that have parked over the island, bring­ing warm clear weather that melts ice and snow, explained Uni­ver­sity of Geor­gia cli­ma­tol­o­gist Thomas Mote.

He and oth­ers say it’s sim­i­lar to the high pres­sure sys­tems that have parked over the Amer­i­can Mid­west bring­ing record-breaking warmth and drought.

Ohio State Uni­ver­sity ice sci­en­tist Jason Box, who returned Tues­day from a three-week visit, said he ditched his cold weather gear for the cot­ton pants that he nor­mally dons in Nevada.

It was sunny and warm and all the locals were talk­ing about how sunny it was,” Box said after get­ting off a plane. “Beyond T-shirt weather.”

Randa Wagner Posted by on Jul 28 2012. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS Feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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