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Greenland Ice Sheet Surface Air Temperature Variability: 1840–2007
- Combines meteorological station records and regional climate model output to develop a continuous 168-yr (1840–2007) spatial reconstruction of monthly, seasonal, and annual mean Greenland ice sheet near-surface air temperatures
- Uses independent observations to assess and compensate for systematic errors in the model output
- Investigates spatial and temporal temperature variability on seasonal and annual time scales
- Finds that volcanic cooling episodes are concentrated in winter and along the western ice sheet slope, and interdecadal warming trends coincide with an absence of major volcanic eruptions
- Finds that the year 2003 was the only year of 1840–2007 with a warm anomaly that exceeds three standard deviations from the 1951–80 base period
- Finds the annual whole ice sheet 1919–32 warming trend is 33% greater in magnitude than the 1994–2007 warming
- However, the data also shows the recent warming was stronger along western Greenland in autumn and southern Greenland in winter
- Finds spring trends marked the 1920s warming onset, while autumn leads the 1994–2007 warming
- Finds in contrast to the 1920s warming, the 1994–2007 warming has not surpassed the Northern Hemisphere anomaly—states an additional 1.0°–1.5°C of annual mean warming would be needed for Greenland to be in phase with the Northern Hemispheric pattern
- Results suggest that the ice sheet melt rates and mass deficit will continue to grow in the early twenty-first century as Greenland’s climate catches up with the Northern Hemisphere warming trend and the Arctic climate warms according to global climate model predictions
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Dec 15, 2017 | Vox
Greenland's ice sheet is driving global sea level rise. One section is melting 80% faster.