Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumOh Well!! 3-D Crevasse Study Shows Greenland's Glaciers Melting And Moving (All Together Now!) Faster Than Expected
A new large-scale study of crevasses on the Greenland Ice Sheet shows that those cracks are widening faster as the climate warms, which is likely to speed ice loss and global sea level rise. Crevasses are wedge-shaped fractures and cracks that open in glaciers where the ice begins to flow faster. They can grow to more than 300 feet wide, thousands of feet long and hundreds of feet deep. Water from melting snow on the surface can flow through crevasses all the way to the base of the ice, joining with other hidden streams to form a vast drainage system that affects how fast glaciers and ice sheets flow.
The study found that crevasses are expanding more quickly than previously detected, and somewhere between 50 and 90 percent of the water flowing through the Greenland Ice Sheet goes through crevasses, which can warm deeply submerged portions of the glacier and increase lubrication between the base of the ice sheet and the bedrock it flows over. Both those mechanisms can accelerate the flow of the ice itself, said Thomas Chudley, a glaciologist at Durham University in the United Kingdom, who is lead author of the new study.
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Using three dimensional images of the crevasses enabled the researchers to get the most accurate estimate of their total volume to date. The results show that crevasses grew significantly wider between 2016 and 2021. And they grow pretty much in lockstep with increased discharge of icebergs and meltwater into the ocean, Chudley said. That makes sense, right? Because the glaciers are speeding up because of influence from the warming ocean. As they speed up, they flow faster.
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In 2020, researchers calculated that Greenlands ice sheet annually loses about 9 billion tons of water every hour. The total annual freshwater flow off Greenland is about equal to the annual flow of the Amazon River, at about 1,000 gigatons per year, said Ken Mankoff, a researcher with the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland who led the comprehensive 2020 study tracking discharge from Greenland from 1986 to 2020. If all its ice melts, it would raise sea level by about 23 feet (7 meters). A complete meltdown is projected to take thousands of years, but there is a lot of scientific evidence from periods of rapid climate warming in the not-so-distant geological past that show pulses of rapid global ice melt, with sea levels sometimes rising in surges of up to 13 feet (4 meters) per century. At the current rate of melting, Greenlands ice could contribute about 3 feet (1 meter) of sea level rise by 2100.
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https://insideclimatenews.org/news/03022025/greenland-ice-sheet-study-shows-glaciers-falling-apart/

sop
(13,444 posts)'Water the 'New Oil' of 21st Century'
"Drawing parallels to other highly-prized resources, Dr. Chellaney discusses the prices of and conflicts caused by petroleum, remarking that 'one indication of how the water situation has changed fundamentally can be seen from
the retail price of [plain, non-glacial] bottled water, [which is] already higher than the international spot price of crude oil.' He identifies water as 'the new oil of the 21st century, but unlike oil, water has no known substitutes, making it more valuable from a long-term investment perspective.' Continuing to compare resources, Chellaney observes the sobering notion that soon water will likely 'be a source of both wealth and conflict.'"
https://asiasociety.org/new-york/brahma-chellaney-water-new-oil-21st-century