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Greenland is accountable for a half millimeter-rise in global sea level per year

Tue, 01 Jan 2008 ANI

Washington, October 1 (ANI): Based on a new method for creating an accurate picture of Greenland's shrinking ice cap, it is now estimated that the country is accountable for a half millimeter-rise in the global sea level per year.

 

The method was developed by researchers from TU Delft, in joint collaboration with the Center for Space Research (CSR) in Austin, Texas, USA.

 

The research was based on data from the German-American GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment) satellites, two satellites that have been orbiting the earth behind each other since mid-2002.

 

Deviations in the Earth's gravitational field cause fluctuations in the distance between the satellites, which is measured to a precision of a millionth of a meter.

 

As gravity is directly related to mass, these data can be used to plot changes in the earth's water balance, such as the disappearance of the ice caps.

 

Satellite data of this kind are ideal for measuring areas such as Greenland, where the extreme conditions make local measurements very difficult.

 

With this in mind, researchers from TU Delft and the CSR devised a method that would create a more accurate picture of the changes taking place in Greenland than had previously been possible.

 

Greenland lost an average of 195 cubic kilometres of ice per year between 2003 and 2008, which is enough to cause an annual increase in the global sea level of half a millimetre, or 5 cm over the course of the next century.

 

A report recently published by the Dutch Delta commission estimated that the melting ice cap in Greenland would cause the sea level to rise by 13 to 22 cm by 2100.

 

But these two figures do not necessarily contradict each other.

 

Whereas the first two years of the study showed a loss of 131 cubic kilometres of ice per year, during the last two years this figure had risen to 222 cubic kilometres per year, an increase of 70 percent.

 

This sharp increase was mainly caused by the extremely warm summer of 2007, when more than 350 cubic metres of ice melted in just two months.

 

The method used also enables scientists to plot the loss of mass per region, thereby providing new insight into the patterns of ice loss.

 

For example, for the first time since measurements were started, the extremely warm summer of 2007 saw a decrease in the ice mass at high altitudes (above 2,000 meters).

 

It also became clear that the ice loss is advancing towards the North of Greenland, particularly on the west coast.

 

The areas around Greenland, particularly Iceland, Spitsbergen and the northern islands of Canada, seem to be particularly badly affected. (ANI)

 


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