Researchers are worried these sudden phenomena may accelerate melting of the ice sheet
Photo by: Stephen Price, Los Alamos National Lab, courtesy of The Ohio State University
In a startling discovery, researchers mapping the Greenland ice sheet have found that two sub-glacial lakes containing billions of gallons of water dried out suddenly in the last few years. While one lake drained away to leave behind a mile-wide crater, the other lake drained away and filled up twice in the last two years.
“The fact that our lake appears to have been stable for at least several decades, and then drained in a matter of weeks—or less—after a few very hot summers, may signal a fundamental change happening in the ice sheet,” said Ian Howat, associate professor of earth sciences at Ohio State University, in news published on the university website
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Howat led the team that discovered the cratered lake. This lake, found to have pooled over 40 years, drained away through a meltwater tunnel within a single season in 2011.
Saying that the repeated draining and filling up of the other lake was a threat to the ice sheet, Michael Bevis, professor of earth sciences at Ohio State and co-author of the second paper, said, ““If enough water is pouring down into the Greenland ice sheet for us to see the same sub-glacial lake empty and re-fill itself over and over, then there must be so much latent heat being released under the ice that we’d have to expect it to change the large-scale behavior of the ice sheet.”
Meltwater tunnels under the ice sheet allow heat and water to flow further into the Greenland coast and are potentially causing the ice to melt faster, say researchers. Studies on each lake were published separately in journals The Cryosphere and Nature.