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- From: rmg3@access1.digex.net (Robert Grumbine)
- Newsgroups: sci.environment,sci.geo.meteorology,sci.geo.geology,news.answers,sci.answers
- Subject: Sea Level, Ice, and Greenhouses -- FAQ
- Followup-To: sci.environment
- Date: 15 Mar 1994 10:02:51 -0500
- Organization: Under construction
- Lines: 327
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: Thu, 31 March 1994 00:00:00 GMT
- Message-ID: <2m4imr$j16@access1.digex.net>
- Reply-To: rmg3@access.digex.net (FAQ author)
- NNTP-Posting-Host: access1.digex.net
- Summary: Survey of physical processes affecting sea level.
- Archive-name: sea-level-faq
- Version: Sea Level FAQ v 6.0 1993/11/21 20:25:00 rmg3
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu sci.environment:17563 sci.geo.meteorology:4505 sci.geo.geology:7076 news.answers:16408 sci.answers:986
-
-
- Last Revision: 11/93
- Extension of conclusion section
-
- Please e-mail me corrections (with citation preferably) if you find an
- error. This FAQ does not contain everything relevant to the problem of
- sea level change. Consequently, you should not use this FAQ as the end
- of investigation on sea level. The basic principles are outlined, no
- more. This note has been cross-posted with the default followup set to
- sci.environment. Please edit your followup line accordingly.
-
- Bob Grumbine rmg3@access.digex.net
-
- There are two ways of changing sea level on the human time scale. We
- can change the amount of water in the oceans, or we can make the water
- there is occupy more or less volume. The first corresponds to changing
- the mass of ice on land. The second can be done by warming or cooling
- the ocean. Colder water is denser, so the same mass of water occupies
- less space. In considering sea level changes, an important
- consideration is the rate at which they occur. 1 meter in 1 day is
- quite disastrous. 1 meter in a million years would be irrelevant on
- the human scale.
-
- Water has a small but nonzero expansion as it warms. The expansion is
- approximately 2E-4 per degree of warming, at the temperatures of the
- upper ocean. To convert that into a sea level change, we need to
- multiply by the amount of warming and the thickness of the ocean that
- gets warmed. The amount of warming is the subject of the climate
- modelling. Let's consider a warming of 1 K for simplicity. The central
- question for the oceanographers is then how deep a layer of the ocean
- gets warmed.
-
- This is a difficult question. The challenge lies in the fact that
- the atmosphere heats the ocean at the top. Obvious. Not obvious is
- that this impedes warming much of the ocean. Warm water is less dense,
- so tends to stay at the surface of the ocean. If this were all that
- happened, only the layer of ocean directly warmed by the sun would be
- affected, about the top 100 meters. There is mixing within the ocean,
- which tends to force some of this heat further down. Balancing that
- effect is the fact that water from the deep ocean (which is cold)
- generally rises through most of the ocean basin. So mixing brings down
- warm water, and upwelling brings up colder water. Let's assume that the
- thickness that gets warmed is approximately the same as that which is
- already warm. That is approximately 500 meters. For the 1 degree
- warming, we then have 500*2E-4*1 meters of rise, or 0.10 meters. The
- time scale over which this occurs is the length of time it takes to mix
- the upper ocean, and is on the order of decades.
-
- In terms of the ice, there are five identifiable reservoirs, only one
- of which is expected to be able to have catastrophic effects on sea
- level. They are sea ice, mountain glaciers, the Greenland ice sheet,
- the East Antarctic ice sheet, and the West Antarctic ice sheet. The one
- expected to be potentially catastrophic is West Antarctica.
- Catastrophic is taken to mean meters of sea level in a few hundred years
- or less.
-
- First, why can't the other four be catastrophic? Sea ice cannot
- change sea level much. That is can do so at all is because sea ice is
- not made of quite the same material as the ocean. Sea ice is much
- fresher than sea water (5 parts per thousand instead of about 35). When
- the ice melts (pretend for the moment that it does so instantly and
- retains its shape), the resultant melt water is still slightly less
- dense than the original sea water. So the meltwater still 'stands' a
- little higher than the local sea level. The amount of extra height
- depends on the salinity difference between ice and ocean, and
- corresponds to about 2% of the thickness of the original ice floe. For
- 30 million square kilometers of ice (global maximum extent) and average
- thickness of 2 meters (the Arctic ice is about 3 meters, the Antarctic
- is about 1), the corresponding change in global sea level would be 2
- (meters) * 0.02 (salinity effect) * 0.10 (fraction of ocean covered by
- ice), or 4 mm. Not a large figure, but not zero either. My thanks to
- chappell@stat.wisc.edu (Rick Chappell) for making me work this out.
-
- Mountain glaciers appear to have already made their contribution.
- Further collapse of them seems unlikely, and they are too small to be
- major elements in sea level change (even should they double their size).
-
- The three ice sheets can change sea level significantly, depending on
- whether they grow or decay. Unlike the sea ice, they are _not_
- floating on the ocean. They are grounded on land. Sometimes, which
- will be important in a minute, that land is far below sea level. So
- what makes the ice sheet grow or decay? As with bank accounts, it is
- income minus outgo. The income is from snow fall -- accumulation. The
- outgo (ablation) is primarily melting and the calving of icebergs.
-
- It is believed that in a warmer climate, the amount of precipitation
- would increase. This is not inarguable as precipitation depends on
- more than temperature. The mechanism for the increase is that warmer
- temperatures put more water into the atmosphere (inarguable) so that
- snow clouds could drop more snow on the ice sheets (arguable).
-
- But, Greenland is already quite snowy and quite warm. A warming is
- likely to increase the melting far more rapidly than the accumulation.
- A small bit of graphics would help here. Draw an arc that opens
- downward. This is the Greenland ice sheet. About three quarters of
- the way to the peak of the arc, draw a horizontal line through the
- sheet. This is the 'snow line'. Above this line, there is net
- accumulation through the year. Below the line, there is net ablation
- through the year. In a warming, the snow line moves upwards. Three
- things happen then. First, in the area that is melting increases.
- Second, the melting rate increases. Third, the area of accumulation
- decreases. The possible fourth is that the rate of accumulation may
- increase in the area that does have net accumulation. But we have
- definitely increased both the area that is melting, and the melt rate.
- Outgo definitely increases, and income probably decreases or at best
- holds even.
-
- These mechanisms set up the possibility for an accelerating collapse
- of the ice sheet. Namely, this excess ablation lowers the ice sheet in
- that region. Since the lower elevations are even warmer, the ablation
- rate increases further. In the mean time, the ice sheet tries to flow
- so as to fill in the depression (ice is a fluid). This lowers the top
- of the ice sheet and decreases the accumulation. Together, the
- accumulation is decreased and the ablation is increased. This is the
- elevation-ablation feedback. It is believed to be operating in
- Greenland already. Under present climatic conditions, the Greenland
- ice cap could not be regrown. It is simply too warm there. (Odd
- thought for Greenland, I know, but glaciologists have unusual
- standards).
-
- But, how fast would it melt away? This is our major question for
- human and ecosystem response. It turns out, not terribly fast. The
- Greenland ice cap is surrounded by mountains. These have the general
- effect of damming up the ice sheet (which is part of the reason it
- still exists for us to worry about). So, according to simulations, the
- collapse would take on the order of several hundred years. The sheet
- represents 5 meters of sea level, so the rate of sea level rise would be
- several (10 if 500 year collapse) millimeters per year. This is well
- under the rates of sea level rise experienced during the end of the
- last ice age (around 20 mm/year), so is not ecologically unprecedented.
- Such rises have occurred several times in the last 2 million years.
-
- What about East Antarctica? The ice sheet there is extremely large,
- about 70 meters of sea level. Get a map for a minute. East Antarctica
- is the part of Antarctica that lies between 15 W and 165 E as you move
- clockwise. It is the vast majority of the Antarctic ice and land mass.
- It also has no decent means of losing mass. Nor of gaining mass. East
- Antarctica is so cold already that a slight warming will not raise the
- snow line enough to put much if any of the region into the melting
- zone. East Antarctica is also ringed by mountains, so that the ice
- sheet has little opportunity to calve bergs. The only sizeable
- mechanism of mass loss is for ice to flow through passes in the
- transantarctic mountains over to west Antarctica.
-
- Having little means to lose mass, East Antarctica would seem to be a
- good place to increase accumulation and lower sea level. A nice idea,
- but it runs into the problem that precipitation is also highly
- inefficient over the East Antarctic plateau (arguably the driest desert
- in the world). The best estimates place the rate of increased
- accumulation over East Antarctica at right about the same as the
- increased ablation on Greenland. That would be a wash for sea level.
- Some redistribution of water from north to south, but no net effect.
-
- West Antarctica is the joker in the deck. Sea ice we can ignore (for
- sea level that is). Greenland and East Antarctica seem to be inclined
- to balance each other's effects. But West Antarctica represents 6
- meters of sea level that _can_ collapse rapidly (as glaciologists
- measure things).
-
- The collapse mechanisms rely on the peculiar geometry of the West
- Antarctic ice sheet. The first major feature of West Antarctica is
- that it includes two large ice _shelves_. These are masses of ice
- approximately the size of France, approximately 500 meters thick. They
- float on the ocean, so cannot directly change sea level if they were
- lost. The peculiarity of having ice shelves is that ice shelves are
- dynamically unstable. The stable configurations are for the ice sheet
- to advance all the way to the edge of the continental shelf, or to
- collapse to include no ice shelf.
-
- Why should we worry about the presence or absence of the ice shelves?
- They can't change sea level if they disappeared. But the ice shelves
- serve another role in West Antarctica. The Filchner-Ronne (in the
- Weddell Sea) and the Ross Ice shelf (in the Ross Sea) act as buttresses
- to the West Antarctic ice sheet. Without these buttresses, the West
- Antarctic ice sheet will collapse into the ocean on a time scale of
- several decades to a few centuries.
-
- The ice shelves contribute to ablation both through melting (at their
- bases more than the surface) and through iceberg calving. Some notably
- large bergs have calved in the last few years, including a couple
- larger than the state of Rhode Island. So through either a warmer
- ocean providing more ablation or through an increase in calving
- (arguably observed), the West Antarctic ice shelves could collapse.
-
- That West Antarctica can collapse much faster than Greenland relies
- on another oddity of the West Antarctic geometry. Most of the ice
- sheet base rests well below (500 - 1000 meters) sea level. The
- important oddity is that as you move further inward, the land is
- further below sea level. So, consider a point near the grounding line
- (the point where the ice shelf meets the ice sheet). Ice flows from the
- grounded part into the floating part. The rate of flow increases as the
- slope (elevation difference) between the two sections increases. Extra
- mass loss in the ice shelf means that the shelf becomes thinner (and
- lower) so more ice flows in from the ice sheet. This makes the ice
- sheet just a little thinner. _But_ at the grounding line, the ice
- sheet had just enough mass to displace sufficient water to reach the sea
- floor. Without that mass, what used to be ice sheet begins to float.
- Since the sea floor slopes down inland of the grounding line, the area
- of ice sheet that turns into ice shelf increases rapidly. More ice
- shelf means more chance for ice to be melted by the ocean.
-
- The collapse mechanism has a mirror-image advance mechanism. Should
- there be net accumulation, the ice sheet/shelf can ground out to the
- continental shelf edge. Go back to near the grounding point. This
- time add some excess mass to the ice sheet/shelf. This thickens the
- system to ground ice shelf. The grounded ice shelf takes area away
- from the ocean ablation zone, which makes the mass balance even more in
- favor of accumulation. So the advance can also be a self- acclerating
- process.
-
- The big question in all this is whether accumulation will go up
- faster than ablation. The problem is, we don't know how either of them
- occurs in West Antarctica at present to satisfactory detail. From
- experience in other polar regions, we would expect the ice shelves and
- central West Antarctica to have a fairly high accumulation rate. They
- are almost as dry as East Antarctica. The ablation from the base of
- the ice shelves relies on the mechanisms that get 'warm' water (the
- water is in fact near the freezing point, some subtleties are involved
- in the melting) from the open ocean to the ice shelf base. We don't
- know enough about how the transfer occurs to be able to say confidently
- whether this ablation would increase or decrease under a warmer
- climate. Iceberg calving, the other major ablation source, is also not
- terribly well understood.
-
- So, the proper answer to the question "Will sea level rise or fall in
- a greenhouse world" is yes. Warming the ocean will cause a sea level
- rise. Ice will act either to raise or lower the sea level. The major
- player for catastrophic change is West Antarctica, which is currently
- in an unstable configuration. It _will_ either advance or retreat.
- Current glaciological opinion favors a collapse. So far, observations
- of the major ice sheets (East and West Antarctica, Greenland) are
- inconclusive as to whether the ice sheets are currently growing or
- shrinking. It is true, though, that in the last century, sea level
- has risen. Note too that effects can be locally serious even without
- catastrophic sea level rise (which I've taken to be meters of sea level
- in under 500 years).
-
- The players Size (approx) Speed (approx)
- Sea Ice 0.4 cm years
- Mountain Glaciers 10's cm decades
- Thermal Expansion 20 cm per degree warming, per km of ocean warmed
- decades
- West Antarctica 500 cm a few centuries
- Greenland 500 cm several centuries
- East Antarctica 7000 cm several centuries to millenia
-
- My thanks to chappell@stat.wisc.edu (Rick Chappell), Ilana Stern,
- Jan Schloerer, neilson%skat.usc.edu@usc.edu (D. Alex Neilson), Kyle
- Swanson, and all others, whose comments (if not addresses) have
- helped improve this note.
-
- Bob Grumbine
- rmg3@access.digex.net
-
- Further Reading:
-
- Climate Change - The IPCC Scientific Assessment
- Report Prepared for IPCC by Working Group I
- Houghton, J.T., G.J. Jenkins, J.J. Ephraums (eds.)
- Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, UK 1990
- ISBN 0-521-40720-6 paperback (approx. US$35)
-
- A look at thermal expansion and sea level:
- Wigley, T. M. L. and S. C. B. Raper Thermal expansion of sea water
- associated with global warming. Nature, 330, 127-131, 1987.
-
- The Role of glaciers
- Oerlemans, J. and J.P.F. Fortuin, Sensitivity of glaciers
- and small ice caps to greenhouse warming,
- Science 258, 115-117 , 1992
-
- The mass balance of Antarctica:
- Jacobs, S. S.. Is the Antarctic Ice Sheet Growing? Nature, 360,
- 29-33, 1992.
-
- Sea level during the last 17,000 years:
- Fairbanks, R. G. A 17,000 year glacio-eustatic sea level record:
- influence of glacial melting rates on the Younger Dryas event and
- deep-ocean circulation. Nature 342, 637-642, 1989.
-
- Classic text on glaciology:
- Paterson, W. S. B. _The Physics of Glaciers_ 2nd ed, Pergamon Press,
- Oxford, New York, Toronto, Sydney, Paris, Frankfurt. 380 pp., 1981.
- ISBN 0-08-024005-4 (hardcover), 0-08-024004-6 (flexicover).
-
- Precipitation in Antarctica:
- Bromwich, D. H. Snowfall in High Southern Latitudes Reviews of
- Geophysics, 26, pp. 149-168, 1988. (This issue contains many
- Antarctic Science papers.)
-
- Proposed research plan for the West Antarctic Ice Sheet Initiative.
- "West Antarctic Ice Sheet Initiative Science and Implementation Plan"
- ed. by R. A. Bindschadler, NASA Conference Publication Preprint. 1991.
- NASA.
-
- Conference on the West Antarctic ice sheet, including an introduction
- to why West Antarctica is the focus:
- Van Der Veen, C. J. and J. Oerlemans, eds. _Dynamics of the West
- Antarctic Ice Sheet_ D. Reidel, Dordrecht, Boston, Lancaster, Tokyo.
- 365 pp., 1987. ISBM 90-277-2370-2.
-
- Greenland in a Greenhouse world: (also general reference)
- Bindschadler, R. A. Contribution of the Greenland Ice Cap to
- changing sea level: present and future. IN: Glaciers, Ice Sheets, and
- Sea Level: Effect of a CO2-induced Climatic Change. US Dept. of
- Energy Report DOE/EV/60235-1, pp. 258-266, 1985.
-
- Antarctica in a Greenhouse:
- Oerlemans, J. Response of the Antarctic Ice Sheet to a climatic
- warming: a model study Journ. climat. 2, 1-11, 1982.
-
- Instability of ice shelves:
- Weertman, J. Stability of the junction of an ice sheet and an ice
- shelf. Journ. Glaciol., 13, 3-11, 1974.
-
- An example of the elevation-ablation feedback, triggered by geology.
- Birchfield, G. E. and R. W. Grumbine "'Slow Physics of Large
- Continental Ice Sheets and Underlying Bedrock and Its Relation to the
- Pleistocene Ice Ages" J. Geophysical Research, 90, 11,294-11,302,
- 1985. -- Also my first paper, which is really the only reason it's
- mentioned.
-
- --
- Bob Grumbine rmg3@access.digex.net
- Sagredo (Galileo Galilei) "You present these recondite matters with too much
- evidence and ease; this great facility makes them less appreciated than they
- would be had they been presented in a more abstruse manner." Two New Sciences
-