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The Contribution of Alaska's Glaciers to Global Sea Level Rise
Keith Echelmeyer, William Harrison, Craig Lingle, Martin Truffer, Anthony Arendt, Virginia Valentine, Sandy Zirnheld University of Alaska Fairbanks
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Outline Introduction Measuring volume changes Alaskan glacier changes
Future changes Effects of glacier changes
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Glaciers in the Arctic Total volume corresponds to ~8 m of sea level
Greenland 1,64 Mio km2 Canadian Arctic Mio km2 Alaska 0.09 Mio km2 Total volume corresponds to ~8 m of sea level
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Mike Fleming, USGS
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Measuring changes: The traditional method
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Laser altimetry system
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Calculating volume changes
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about 100 glacier measured
(out of several thousand)
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Regional volume change
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Total volume change 3300 km3 since 1950s
enough to cover state of Alaska in 7 ft of water (or Texas in 15 ft)
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Contribution to Rising Sea Level
Time Period Volume Change (km3 WE/yr) (mm/yr Sea Level EQ) Early: 1950s to 1990s -46 7 0.13 0.02 Recent: 1990s to 2001 -88 28 0.24 0.08
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Assessing future changes
Use models to relate climate to current and past mass balance Derive sensitivity factors for glaciers in different climate regimes (see Arendt et al poster) These models only apply to current glacier geometry Long term predictions need to take glacier dynamics into account
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Complications Glaciers with flow instabilities can show a variety of complex behavior: Surging glaciers Tidewater glaciers
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1965 1964 Austin Post, USGS
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Surging glaciers Surge: no appreciable change in total mass
complete reversal of geometry quasi periodic phenomenon not (or weakly) related to climate
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Tidewater glacier cycle: Glacier Bay
120 km
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Tidewater glaciers Tidewater glacier cycle:
very rapid retreat (decades) slow advance (centuries or more) not directly related to climate
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Effects of volume change
Sealevel rise: currently ~0.24 mm/a Coastal currents
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Alaska Coastal Current
Greenland 1,64 Mio km2 Canadian Arctic Mio km2 Alaska 0.09 Mio km2
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Effects of volume change
Sealevel rise: currently ~0.24 mm/a Coastal currents Isostatic uplift
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Larsen et al, 2003
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Conclusions Alaska provides the biggest current glacial contribution to sea level rise Assessing the reactions to future climate change requires regional mass balance models Glacier dynamics can pose significant challenges for such an assessment
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Thank you
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Glacier changes
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Variations of the Earth’s surface temperature: past 1000 years.
(source: IPCC 2001)
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1895 ~1860 1790 Situk River ~1130 Yakutat Airport 5 miles
Hubbard Glacier 1895 ~1860 1790 Russell Nunatak Russell Nunatak Fiord Fiord Fiord Fiord Yakutat Bay Situk River ~1130 Yakutat Airport 5 miles Dennis Trabant, USGS
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Grand Pacific Glacier Glacier trim line (~1000 m asl)
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Example of modern tidewater glacier retreat: Columbia Glacier
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