Monday, March 22, 2010

E. J. Stone et al., The effect of more realistic forcings and boundary conditions on the modelled geometry and sensitivity of the Greenland ice-sheet

The Cryosphere Discuss., 4 (2010) 233-285; www.the-cryosphere-discuss.net/4/233/2010/
© Author(s) 2010. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.


The effect of more realistic forcings and boundary conditions on the modelled geometry and sensitivity of the Greenland ice-sheet

E. J. Stone (BRIDGE, School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, U.K.), D. J. Lunt (BRIDGE, School of Geographical Sciences, University of Bristol, U.K.), I. C. Rutt (School of the Environment and Society, Swansea University, U.K.) and E. Hanna (Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, U.K.)

Abstract

Ice thickness and bedrock topography are essential boundary conditions for numerical modelling of the evolution of the Greenland ice-sheet (GrIS). The datasets currently in use by the majority of Greenland ice-sheet modelling studies are over two decades old and based on data collected from the 1970s and 8190s. We use a newer, high-resolution Digital Elevation Model of the GrIS and new temperature and precipitation forcings to drive the Glimmer ice-sheet model offline under steady state, present day climatic conditions. Comparisons are made in terms of ice-sheet geometry between these new datasets and older ones used in the EISMINT-3 exercise. We find that changing to the newer bedrock and ice thickness makes the greatest difference to Greenland ice volume and ice surface extent. When all boundary conditions and forcings are simultaneously changed to the newer datasets the ice-sheet is 25% larger in volume compared with observation and 11% larger than that modelled by EISMINT-3.


We performed a tuning exercise to improve the modelled present day ice-sheet. Several solutions were chosen in order to represent improvement in different aspects of the Greenland ice-sheet geometry: ice thickness, ice volume and ice surface extent. We applied these new setups of Glimmer to several future climate scenarios where atmospheric CO2 concentration was elevated to 400, 560 and 1120 ppmv (compared with 280 ppmv in the control) using a fully coupled General Circulation Model. Collapse of the ice-sheet was found to occur between 400 and 560 ppmv, a threshold substantially lower than previously modelled using the standard EISMINT-3 setup. This work highlights the need to assess carefully boundary conditions and forcings required by ice-sheet models and the implications that these can have on predictions of ice-sheet geometry under past and future climate scenarios.

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Citation: Stone, E. J., Lunt, D. J., Rutt, I. C., and Hanna, E. (2010) The effect of more realistic forcings and boundary conditions on the modelled geometry and sensitivity of the Greenland ice-sheet, The Cryosphere Discuss., 4, 233-285.


Link:  http://www.the-cryosphere-discuss.net/4/233/2010/tcd-4-233-2010.html 

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