Antarctica and Greenland may be two of the most remote places on Earth but what happens in both these vast landscapes can significantly impact on human activity further afield.
Recent changes seen in vast ice sheets could have serious implications for millions of people around the world who live in coastal areas. These ice sheets store enough water to raise sea levels by over 60 metres, and there are some very worrying signs about their stability, especially in West Antarctica.
The real problem lies in the fact that ice sheets are reacting to increases in air and ocean temperatures and contributing to rising sea levels, currently estimated to be around three millimetres a year. While it is clear that ice sheet contributions to sea level rise have accelerated in the last decade or so, there is much more uncertainty about how ice sheets might respond in the future. With one recent study giving estimates which ranged from 60 centimetres to three metres by 2300. And that’s just from Antarctica.
This uncertainty stems from the way ice sheets lose mass and transfer water to the oceans. In Greenland warmer air temperatures melt the ice sheet surface, which then causes water to drain off into the ocean. But in Antarctica, temperatures are so cold that very little of the ice sheet ever melts. Streams of ice
So how does Antarctic ice make its way to the ocean? The answer lies in ice streams, which are zones of the ice sheet that flow much faster than the surrounding ice at hundreds of metres per year. The ice streams then discharge ice into the ocean in the form of icebergs that eventually melt.
Ice streams can be unpredictable as they can turn on and off and change their position. Measurements show that there are about 50 major ice streams in Antarctica, which account for around 90% of the ice that is lost each year.
Ice streams make predicting future changes in ice sheets very difficult. While it’s relatively easy to estimate how much more melting might occur if air temperatures increase by say 2°C, nobody really knows what will happen to the ice streams.
Lessons from the past
A different approach to predicting the future is to look to the past and see how ice streams responded to previous periods of climate warming. In our paper, we reconstructed past ice stream activity, when an ice sheet the size of Antarctica disappeared over North America at the end of the last ice age between around 20,000 and 7,000 years ago.
This “North American Ice Sheet” covered most of Canada and by using satellite imagery to view land forms it left behind, we were able to map the location of all of the major ice streams that were once active in this ice sheet. We then used an existing database to track the retreat of the ice sheet over time – and estimated when the ice streams switched on and off. We also worked out how much ice the streams might have discharged from the ice sheet.
We found ice streams switched off as the ice sheet retreated, having much less influence on the dynamics of the ice sheet. This means that the larger ice sheets simply have more ice streams and vice versa. This shows that the collapse of the North American ice sheet was mostly caused by increased melting of the ice sheet’s surface and not necessarily by ice streaming.
Lessons for the future
Ice streams in Greenland and West Antarctica are contributing to sea level rise which is likely to continue for at least the next century or so. Our reconstruction clearly showed ice streaming is much more likely to take place when the ice sheet is in contact with the ocean and slides over a bed of soft, slippery sediments. This confirms that some parts of West Antarctica may be especially vulnerable.
While not everyone agrees the North American ice sheet is a useful comparison for the present day ice sheets, it is the only comparison we have of an ice sheet as big as Antarctica experiencing a rapid warming, and eventually complete disappearance. So when it comes to the millions of people around the world who live in coastal areas, only time will tell if what we have learnt from the past has relevance for the future.
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This article originally appeared on The Conversation
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