Published on Sunday, November 20, 2005 by the lndependent/UK  
The Big Thaw: Global Disaster Will Follow If the Ice Cap on Greenland 
Melts
Now scientists say it is vanishing far faster than even they expected.
 
by Geoffrey Lean 
  
Greenland's glaciers have begun to race towards the ocean, leading 
scientists to predict that the vast island's ice cap is approaching 
irreversible meltdown, The Independent on Sunday can reveal. 

Research to be published in a few days' time shows how glaciers that 
have been stable for centuries have started to shrink dramatically as 
temperatures in the Arctic have soared with global warming. On top of 
this, record amounts of the ice cap's surface turned to water this 
summer.

The two developments - the most alarming manifestations of climate 
change to date - suggest that the ice cap is melting far more rapidly 
than scientists had thought, with immense consequences for 
civilisation and the planet. Its complete disappearance would raise 
the levels of the world's seas by 20 feet, spelling inundation for 
London and other coastal cities around the globe, along with much of 
low-lying countries such as Bangladesh.

More immediately, the vast amount of fresh water discharged into the 
ocean as the ice melts threatens to shut down the Gulf Stream, which 
protects Britain and the rest of northern Europe from a freezing 
climate like that of Labrador.

The revelations, which follow the announcement that the melting of 
sea ice in the Arctic also reached record levels this summer, come as 
the world's governments are about to embark on new negotiations about 
how to combat global warming.

This week they will meet in Montreal for the first formal talks on 
whether there should be a new international treaty on cutting the 
pollution that causes climate change after the Kyoto protocol expires 
in seven years' time. Writing in The Independent yesterday, Tony 
Blair called the meeting "crucial", adding that it "must start to 
shape an inclusive global solution". But little progress is expected, 
largely because of continued obstruction from President George Bush.

The new evidence from Greenland, to be published in the journal 
Geophysical Research Letters, shows a sudden decline in the giant 
Helheim glacier, a river of ice that grinds down from the inland ice 
cap to the sea through a narrow rift in the mountain range on the 
island's east coast.

Professor Slawek Tulaczyk, of the Department of Earth Sciences at the 
University of California, Santa Cruz, told the IoS that the glacier 
had dropped 100 feet this summer.

Over the past four years, the research adds, the front of the 
glacier - which has remained in the same place since records began - 
has retreated four and a half miles. As it has retreated and thinned, 
the effects have spread inland "very fast indeed", says Professor 
Tulaczyk. As the centre of the Greenland ice cap is only 150 miles 
away, the researchers fear that it, too, will soon be affected.

The research echoes disturbing studies on the opposite side of 
Greenland: the giant Jakobshavn glacier - at four miles wide and 
1,000 feet thick the biggest on the landmass - is now moving towards 
the sea at a rate of 113 feet a year; the normal annual speed of a 
glacier is just one foot.

The studies have found that water from melted ice on the surface is 
percolating down through holes on the glacier until it forms a layer 
between it and the rock below, slightly lifting it and moving it 
toward the sea as if on a conveyor belt. This one glacier alone is 
reckoned now to be responsible for 3 per cent of the annual rise of 
sea levels worldwide.

"We may be very close to the threshold where the Greenland ice cap 
will melt irreversibly," says Tavi Murray, professor of glaciology at 
the University of Wales. Professor Tulaczyk adds: "The observations 
that we are seeing now point in that direction."

Until now, scientists believed the ice cap would take 1,000 years to 
melt entirely, but Ian Howat, who is working with Professor Tulaczyk, 
says the new developments could "easily" cut this time "in half".

There is also a more immediate danger as the melting ice threatens to 
disrupt the Gulf Stream, responsible for Britain's mild climate. The 
current, which brings us as much heat in winter as we get from the 
sun, is driven by very salty water sinking off Greenland. This drives 
a deep current of cold ocean southwards, in turn forcing the warm 
water north.

Research at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute in Massachusetts 
has shown, that even before the glaciers started accelerating, the 
water in the North Atlantic was getting fresher in what it describes 
as "the largest and most dramatic oceanic change ever measured in the 
era of modern instruments".

Even before these discoveries, scientists had shortened to evens the 
odds on the Gulf Stream failing this century. When it failed before, 
12,700 years ago, Britain was covered in permafrost for 1,300 years.

© 2005 Independent News & Media (UK) Ltd.

 







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