NASA Finds Vast Regions of West Antarctica Melted in Recent Past

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May 15, 2007

Grey Hautaluoma/Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0668/1726

Alan Buis
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
818-354-0474 

RELEASE: 07-115

NASA FINDS VAST REGIONS OF WEST ANTARCTICA MELTED IN RECENT PAST

WASHINGTON - A team of NASA and university scientists has found clear 
evidence that extensive areas of snow melted in west Antarctica in 
January 2005 in response to warm temperatures. This was the first 
widespread Antarctic melting ever detected with NASA's QuikScat 
satellite and the most significant melt observed using satellites 
during the past three decades. The affected regions encompass a 
combined area as big as California.

Son Nghiem of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., and 
Konrad Steffen, director of the Cooperative Institute for Research in 
Environmental Sciences at the University of Colorado, Boulder, led 
the team. Using data from QuikScat, they measured snowfall 
accumulation and melt in Antarctica and Greenland from July 1999 
through July 2005.

The melting occurred in multiple distinct regions, including far 
inland, at high latitudes and at high elevations, where melt had been 
considered unlikely. Evidence of melting was found up to 560 miles 
inland from the open ocean, farther than 85 degrees south (about 310 
miles from the South Pole) and higher than 6,600 feet above sea 
level. Maximum air temperatures at the time of the melting were 
unusually high, reaching more than 41 F in one of the affected areas. 
They remained above melting for approximately a week.

"Antarctica has shown little to no warming in the recent past with the 
exception of the Antarctic Peninsula, but now large regions are 
showing the first signs of the impacts of warming as interpreted by 
this satellite analysis," said Steffen. "Increases in snowmelt, such 
as this in 2005, definitely could have an impact on larger scale 
melting of Antarctica's ice sheets if they were severe or sustained 
over time." 

The satellite's scatterometer instrument sends radar pulses to the ice 
sheet surface, measuring the echoed pulses that bounce back. When 
snow melts and then refreezes, it changes to ice, just as ice cream 
crystallizes when it is left out too long and is then refrozen. 
QuikScat can differentiate this icy fingerprint in the snow cover and 
can map on a continental scale the extent of strong snowmelt over the 
subsequently formed ice layer. Available ground station measurements 
validate the satellite result.

The 2005 melt was intense enough to create an extensive ice layer when 
water refroze after the melt. However, the melt was not prolonged 
enough for the melt water to flow into the sea.

"Water from melted snow can penetrate into ice sheets through cracks 
and narrow, tubular glacial shafts called moulins," Steffen said. "If 
sufficient melt water is available, it may reach the bottom of the 
ice sheet. This water can lubricate the underside of the ice sheet at 
the bedrock, causing the ice mass to move toward the ocean faster, 
increasing sea level."

Changes in the ice mass of Antarctica, Earth's largest freshwater 
reservoir, are important to understanding global sea level rise. 
Large amounts of Antarctic freshwater flowing into the ocean also 
could affect ocean salinity, currents and global climate.

Nghiem said while no further melting had been detected through March 
2007, more monitoring is needed. "Satellite scatterometry is like an 
X-ray that sees through snow and finds ice layers beneath as early as 
possible," he said. "It is vital we continue monitoring this region 
to determine if a long-term trend may be developing."

QuikScat data are helping scientists better understand how Antarctica 
and Greenland's ice sheets gain or lose mass. "We need to know what's 
coming in and going out of the ice sheets," Nghiem said. "QuikScat 
data, combined with data from NASA's IceSat and Gravity Recovery and 
Climate Experiment satellites, along with aircraft and ground 
measurements, all contribute to more accurate estimates of how the 
polar ice sheets are changing."

The study, "Snow Accumulation and Snowmelt Monitoring in Greenland and 
Antarctica," appears in the recently published book "Dynamic Planet." 


For more information about this study, contact Jim Scott of the 
University of Colorado, Boulder, at 303-492-3114 or Adriana Raudzens 
Bailey of the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental 
Sciences, Boulder, at 303-492-6289.

For more information on QuikScat, visit:

http://winds.jpl.nasa.gov

	
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