Modeling the Greenland Ice Sheet's Committed Contribution to Sea Level During the 21st Century

Author:

Nias Isabel J.123ORCID,Nowicki Sophie14ORCID,Felikson Denis15ORCID,Loomis Bryant6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cryospheric Sciences Laboratory NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt MD USA

2. Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center University of Maryland College Park MD USA

3. School of Environmental Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

4. Department of Geology University at Buffalo Buffalo NY USA

5. Goddard Earth Sciences Technology and Research Studies and Investigations II Morgan State University Baltimore MD USA

6. Geodesy and Geophysics Laboratory NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt MD USA

Abstract

AbstractMass loss from the Greenland Ice Sheet can be partitioned between surface mass balance and discharge due to ice dynamics through its marine‐terminating outlet glaciers. A perturbation to a glacier terminus (e.g., a calving event) results in both an instantaneous response in velocity and mass loss and a diffusive response due to the evolution of ice thickness over time. This diffusive response means the total impact of a retreat event can take decades to be fully realized. Here we model the committed response of the Greenland Ice Sheet by applying perturbations to the marine‐terminating glacier termini that represent recent observed changes, and simulating the response over the 21st century, while holding the climate forcing constant. The sensitivity of the ice sheet response to model parameter uncertainty is explored within an ensemble framework, and Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment data is used to constrain the results using a Bayesian calibration approach. We find that the Greenland Ice Sheet's committed contribution to 21st century sea level rise is at least 33.5 [17.5 52.4] mm (25th and 75th percentiles in brackets), with at least 6 mm being attributable directly to terminus retreat that occurred between 2007 and 2015. The spread in our projections is driven by uncertainty in the basal friction coefficient. Our results complement the ISMIP6 Greenland projections, which report the ice sheet response to future forcing, excluding the background response. In this way, we can obtain estimates of Greenland's total contribution to sea level rise in 2100.

Funder

Earth Sciences Division

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics

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