Satellite Provides Sharper Picture of Shrinking Ice Sheet – Truthdig.
LONDON—Greenland’s ice sheet shrank by an average of 243 billion tonnes a year between 2003 and 2009—a rate of melting that is enough to raise the world’s sea levels by 0.68 mm per year.
In what is claimed as the first detailed study, geologist Beata Csatho, of the University of Buffalo in the US, and colleagues report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that they used satellite and aerial data to reconstruct changes in the ice sheet at 100,000 places, and to confirm that the process of losing 277 cubic kilometres of ice a year is more complex than anyone had predicted.
The Greenland ice sheet is the second biggest body of ice on Earth—second only to Antarctica—and its role in the machinery of the northern hemisphere climate is profound.
Careful measurements
It has been closely studied for decades, but such are the conditions in the high Arctic that researchers have tended to make careful measurements of ice melt and glacier calving in fixed locations—in particular, at four glaciers—and then try to estimate what that might mean for the island as a whole.
“The great importance of our data is that, for the first time, we have acomprehensive picture of how all of Greenland’s glaciers have changed over the past decade,” Dr Csatho said.