Scientists
were baffled last year after meltwater lakes atop Greenland's ice sheet
suddenly drained out at rates rivaling Niagara Falls.
Now
a team of U.S. researchers says it has figured out the bizarre phenomenon and
that could help them forecast global sea-level rise.
Vertical
shafts in the ice sheet, called moulins, can funnel melt water beneath parts of
the glacier and lift them up. This causes cracks beneath the so-called
supragalcial lakes that can empty them in days, according to scientists from
the Massachusetts Institute of Technology-Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
(MIT/WHOI) Joint Program in Oceanography.
Draining
lakes can accelerate sea-level rise by suddenly injecting large volumes of
water into the ocean and lubricating the flow of ice offshore. However, the
finding suggests that only lakes at lower, warmer altitudes on the ice sheet
where moulins are more prevalent are vulnerable, according to the research
published in the journal Nature.
"The
trigger is less likely to occur at lakes at higher elevations on the ice sheet
— even though water volumes in those lakes can be large," according to the
research.
"Our
discovery will help us predict more accurately how supraglacial lakes will
affect ice sheet flow and sea level rise as the region warms in the
future," lead author Laura Stevens wrote in a Woods Hole press release.
Scientists
at Ohio State and Cornell University said last year that two lakes on the
Greenland ice sheet that had previously held billions of gallons of water had
mysteriously disappeared.
The Greenland ice sheet covers more
than 600,000 square miles (1.6 million square kilometers) and is expected to be
a significant contributor to sea-level rise as it melts.
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