Nearly All of Greenland’s Surface Melted Nearly Overnight in 2012—Here’s Why
High temperatures and black carbon from forest fires and fossil fuels combined to push the huge ice sheet over the edge
By Sarah Zielinski
SMITHSONIAN.COM
On July 12, 2012, the Indian Space Research Organization satellite Oceansat-2 detected something odd in Greenland: In just a couple of days, the surface of the interior of the glacier-covered island melted. Although ice still persisted under the melt, about 97 percent of all of Greenland was covered with meltwater.
This was the first time such an occurrence had been detected in the satellite era. And scientists could see from matching refrozen slicks in several ice cores that the last time such an event happened was back in 1889.
At the time of the melt, scientists werent sure what was going on. There was unusually warm air sitting over Greenland at the time. And that was a known contributor to the event. But it was black carbon from forest fires in North America and Siberia, as well as from the burning of fossil fuels, that tipped the ice over the edge, Kaitlin M. Keegan of Dartmouth College and colleagues report today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The ice sheets sitting atop Greenland and Antarctica hold nearly all of the planets freshwater. And if they melted, Greenland would contribute about 6 meters (20 feet) to sea level and Antarctica around 60 meters (200 feet). Neither is expected to melt wholesale anytime soon, but scientists have found that their ice is indeed starting to turn to water.
In just a few days in July 2012, the interior of Greenland underwent widespread surface melting (red color), which was detected by the satellite Oceansat-2. (Image courtesy of Dorothy Hall, NASA/GSFC)
Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/Greenland-surface-melted-overnight-why-180951501/