Title: Warming, Melting, Land Ice and the IPY
1Warming, Melting, Land Ice and the IPY
- Robert Bindschadler
- NASA
- Robert.A.Bindschadler_at_nasa.gov
2Me (Athabasca Glacier, 1970)
Hes a future glaciologist?
3Worldwide Glacier Retreat
- Glaciers in all regions are now retreating
- Retreat is accelerating
A bellwether of change, but
Source M. Dyurgerov
4Glaciers have limited global impact
East
West
2-6 of all water on Earth 70-80 of all fresh
water on Earth
56 meter rise--Greenland Ice Sheet is equal to 6
meters
6Florida without Greenland ice sheet
7Global Warming is Real
Temperature Change (oC)
Source GISS
8Heating will be concentrated on land
Mean
Mean
Temperature Change (oC)IPCC AR4 scenario A2 mean
warming in 2090-99 vs.1980-99
9(us)
(our kids and grandkids)
Not only do almost all people experience
above-global-average warming, but the
uncertainties are skewed--things may be a little
better, or a good bit worse.
10Sea-Level History
- Less ice in warmer climates
- Ice sheets shrink faster than they grow
- Sea level change is not smooth
HIGH
SEA LEVEL
LOW
TEMPERATURE
WARM
COLD
THEN
NOW
Time
There will be less ice
11Sea level has gone up much faster
- Relatively steady over past 6000 yrs (2 mm/yr.)
- Periods of fast rise
- Up to 20 times present rate
- Cant be due to melting alone
- Ice flow dictates rapid sea level rise
- Accumulation variations average out on large scale
12maximum?
13Three Different Signatures Dramatic Land Ice
Chnages
- Outlet glaciers feeding ice shelves
- Summer acceleration
- Sustained acceleration of deep outlet glaciers
141. Disintegrating Ice Shelves
Require gt10,000 years to form
2000 km2 of Larsen Ice Shelf disintegrated in 2
days.
Source T. Scambos
Disintegrate in weeks!
15Consequence of Ice Shelf Loss
up to 510 faster in 2 years
up to 400 faster in 2 years
(Scambos et al., 2004)
Formerly buttressed glaciers accelerate
162. Summer Acceleration observed in Greenland
Surface meltwater can account for 10 increase in
annual speed
(from Zwally et al., 2002)
17Greenland Surface Water Flow
Process appears similar to mountain glaciers, but
there are some differences in timing
18Greenland melt extent is increasing
Observations show flow acceleration magnitude is
proportional to amount of melt
193. Accelerating Outlet Glaciers
(Source I. Joughin)
20Rapid Retreat
Jacobshavns Isbrae
Kangerdlugssuaq Glacier
Jacobshavns Isbrae
21North and South
Source W. Krabill
The deepest outlet glaciers exiting into the
ocean are responding most. WHY?
22The most sophisticated ice-flow models cant
reproduce these behaviorsbut
23Tidewater glaciers are a good analogue to predict
ice sheet future
Muir Glacier, Alaska
1941
2004
Outlet glaciers are displaying classic drastic
retreat traits similar to Alaskan tidewater
glaciers
1971
24Drastic Retreat
Successive profiles of retreat
Retreat ? Deeper Water ? Increased Calving
Retreat continues until glacier bed rises above
sea level
25Columbia Glacier
- Last Alaskan tidewater glacier on extended
moraine (in 1978) - Retreat began in 1980
- 15 km retreat by 2000
- 40 km retreat expected
??
2000
1980
Source USGS
26Columbia Glacier, Alaska
Helheim Glacier, Greenland
1996 aerial photograph
2007 image (GoogleEarth)
27- Central region of Greenland is below sea level
- Jacobshavns Isbrae occupies subglacial channel
connected to central depression
Russel Huff, Univ. of Colorado
28Antarctica
West Ant.
East Ant.
Nearly all of West Antarctica ice sheet and much
of East Antarctica ice sheet rests on bed below
sea level
29Links between Processes
- Acceleration causes drawdown upstream
- Drawdown accelerates surface melting processes
- Increased meltwater enhances acceleration
30 31The concept of IPY 2007-2008
An intensive burst of internationally
coordinated, interdisciplinary, scientific
research and observations focussed on the
Earths Polar regions. Time frame 1 March 2007
to 1 March 2009
Co-sponsored by ICSU and WMO
www.ipy.org
32Previous IPYs
- 1882-83 First International Polar Year.
Organized by the International Meteorological
Organization (later renamed WMO). - 1932-33 Second International Polar Year (IMO/WMO)
- 1957-58 Third International Polar Year
- International Geophysical Year (ICSU and WMO)
33Outcomes of IGY (1957-58)
- Establishment of Arctic and Antarctic permanent
bases and in-situ programmes - Establishment of World Data Centres
- International Research Institutions (SCAR, SCOR,
subsequently WCRP, etc) - Antarctic Treaty System
- Major public impact
- A lasting legacy of data, network and motivation
34IPY 2007-2008Why now and what is different?
- IGY50 - but more importantly an opportunity for
exciting, cutting-edge and relevant science. - Involvement of key disciplines in all aspects of
natural science and social science. - Truly international involving more than
traditional polar nations. - Directions and objectives developed by the
scientific community, but with full engagement of
funding agencies in planning.
35IPY Planning Group (2003-2004)
- IPY Themes
- Current Status of Polar
- Regions
- Change in the Polar
- Regions
- Global Linkages
- New Frontiers
- Polar Regions as Vantage
- Points
- The Human Dimension
36Urgent, Significant
IPY PROJECT
37Urgent, Significant
International Partnerships
IPY PROJECT
38Urgent, Significant
International Partnerships
Builds Connections
IPY PROJECT
39Urgent, Significant
International Partnerships
Builds Connections
IPY PROJECT
Store, Share Data
40Urgent, Significant
International Partnerships
Builds Connections
IPY PROJECT
Store, Share Data
Education, Outreach
41Urgent, Significant
International Partnerships
Builds Connections
IPY PROJECT
Store, Share Data
Education, Outreach
Expand Polar Community
228 Projects 50,000 participants US 1.25
Billion
4231 nations have National Committees for IPY
43(No Transcript)
44The IPY Legacy
- Scientific legacy observational systems and
networks technologies baseline data sets
understanding of the Earth System. - Collaborative Legacy enhanced collaboration and
joint funding information sharing. - Human Legacy next generation of researchers and
leaders involvement of Arctic residents public
awareness and interest.
45Summary
- Land ice is going accelerating change
- Our future will contain less land ice and higher
sea level - Even the experts dont know how much or how fast,
but were working hard to predict these - IPY is a platform to communicate these changes to
the public