A synthesis of rapid meltwater and ice discharge changes: large forcings from the ice with impacts on global sea level and North Atlantic freshwater budgets

Basic Project Information

Start Date: 1 September 2005
End Date: 31 August 2010
Full Title: A synthesis of rapid meltwater and ice discharge changes: large forcings from the ice with impacts on global sea level and North Atlantic freshwater budgets
Abstract or Short Description:

Freshwater discharge from the Greenland ice sheet has a direct and immediate effect on global sea level, has the potential to impact global climate by perturbing nearby sensitive regions of oceanic deep-water formation, and is an important but as yet poorly quantified part of the pan-Arctic water balance.

The investigators will synthesize a range of extant data sets using numerous methods. Remote sensing and atmospheric modeling calibrated by surface data accurately reveal a spatially resolved history of surface melting on Greenland over decades, and coastal weather stations extend observations to more than a century. Sophisticated transfer techniques, including nonlinear approaches, will be used to downscale from these instrumental data to specific ice-core records of melt, learning how the widespread signal is archived. The derived transfer functions, the centuries-long ice-core records, and the century-length coastal-station records then will allow upscaling to determine meltwater variability over longer times than now available. Remotely sensed changes in ice shelves/tongues and outlet-glacier flow speeds will be combined with the contemporaneous histories of surface melting, and analyzed using diagnostic ice-flow modeling incorporating longitudinal stresses to learn how meltwater variability and ice shelf changes force ice-flow variability. If successful diagnosis is achieved, then the longer melt history from the ice-cores can be used to estimate the ice-flow variability over the same interval; the relations between ice-flow and melt changes also can be used prognostically in assessing future changes in the ice sheet affecting freshwater fluxes.

Funding Agencies: National Science Foundation
Unique Project Identifier(s):
0531211
0531250
0531345
0531306
0531270
0531075

Personnel Information

Principal Investigator(s):
Richard Alley (ralley@essc.psu.edu)
Co-Principal Investigator(s):
Byron Parizek (parizek [at] geosc [dot] psu [dot] edu)
  • Name: Byron Parizek
  • Department: Department of Geosciences and EMS Earth and Environmental Systems Institute
  • Organization: Pennsylvania State University
  • Email: parizek [at] geosc [dot] psu [dot] edu
David Reusch (dreusch [at] ees [dot] nmt [dot] edu)
  • Name: David Reusch
  • Department: Department of Earth and Environmental Science
  • Organization: New Mexico Tech
  • Email: dreusch [at] ees [dot] nmt [dot] edu

Scientific Focus

Implementation Categories:

Geographic Information

Region: 
Greenland
Region: 
Pan-Arctic

Data Collected and/or Produced