I ce mass loss from the Greenland Ice Sheet is a primary contributor to global sea level rise. The rate of ice loss has accelerated over the last couple of decades and Greenland currently contributes about 0.7-1.1 mm/yr to sea-level rise (260-380 Gt/ice per year; Enderlin et al. 2014; Shepherd et al...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Twila Moon
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.644.5406
http://www.usclivar.org/sites/default/files/documents/2014/2014SpringVariations2.pdf
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Summary:I ce mass loss from the Greenland Ice Sheet is a primary contributor to global sea level rise. The rate of ice loss has accelerated over the last couple of decades and Greenland currently contributes about 0.7-1.1 mm/yr to sea-level rise (260-380 Gt/ice per year; Enderlin et al. 2014; Shepherd et al. 2012). Predicting the potential rate and limits of future mass loss requires a clear understanding of ice sheet dynamics and how the ice sheet is coupled to the climate system. Roughly a third to a half of Greenland ice loss is due to discharge through iceberg calving at the ice-ocean interface, as opposed to in situ surface melt (Enderlin et al. 2014; Shepherd et al. 2012). Glacier velocity, as well as ice thickness, terminus advance and retreat, and the mechanisms controlling their variability, must be understood to calculate and predict ice sheet discharge. Characterization and understanding of ice sheet velocity contributes both to exploring the processes controlling ice dynamics and to constraining ice sheet models used to predict future mass loss and associated sea-level rise. Modern satellite technology and analysis techniques now allow for a more comprehensive understanding of ice flow variability across the entire Greenland Ice Sheet, including year-to-year velocity changes. To take advantage of the lengthening satellite data record, an ice-sheet-wide survey of interannual velocity changes on Greenland outlet glaciers (glacier terminus width>1.5 km) was completed for 2000 through 2010 (Moon et al. 2012). The study examined winter velocities for 2000/01 and every year from 2005/06 through 2010/11 (subsequently referred to by the earlier year, so 2010/11 = 2010). Prior to this study, outlet glacier velocities had only been examined for smaller groups of glaciers or by comparing broad velocity snapshots with ~5-year sampling. The study revealed notable regional and local variability underlying mean speedup across much of the ice sheet. IN THIS ISSUE Greenland outlet glacier ice-flow variability