Large and irreversible future decline of the Greenland ice sheet
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Published:2020-12-01
Issue:12
Volume:14
Page:4299-4322
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Gregory Jonathan M.ORCID, George Steven E., Smith Robin S.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. We have studied the evolution of the Greenland ice sheet
under a range of constant
climates typical of those projected for the end of the present century
using a dynamical ice sheet model (Glimmer) coupled to
an atmosphere general circulation model (FAMOUS–ice AGCM).
The ice sheet surface mass balance (SMB) is simulated within the AGCM
by a multilayer snow scheme from snowfall and surface energy fluxes,
including refreezing and dependence on altitude within AGCM grid boxes.
Over millennia under any warmer climate, the ice sheet
reaches a new steady state, whose
mass is correlated with the magnitude of global climate change imposed.
If a climate that gives the recently observed SMB were maintained,
global-mean sea level rise (GMSLR) would reach 0.5–2.5 m.
For any global warming exceeding 3 K, the contribution to GMSLR exceeds 5 m.
For the largest global warming considered (about +5 K), the rate of GMSLR
is initially 2.7 mm yr−1, and eventually only a small ice cap
endures, resulting in over 7 m of GMSLR.
Our analysis gives a qualitatively different impression from previous work
in that we do not find
a sharp threshold warming that divides scenarios in
which the ice sheet suffers little reduction
from those in which it is mostly lost.
The final steady state is achieved by withdrawal from the coast in some places
and a tendency for increasing SMB due to enhancement of
cloudiness and snowfall over the remaining ice sheet by the effects
of topographic change on atmospheric circulation,
outweighing the tendency for decreasing SMB from the reduction
in surface altitude.
If late 20th-century climate is restored
after the ice sheet mass has fallen below
a threshold of about 4 m of sea level equivalent,
it will not regrow to its present extent
because the snowfall in the northern part of the island is reduced
once the ice sheet retreats from there.
In that case, about 2 m of GMSLR would become irreversible.
In order to avoid this outcome, anthropogenic climate change must be
reversed before the ice sheet has declined to the threshold mass,
which would be reached in about 600 years at the highest rate of
mass loss within the likely range of the
Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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