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Cryosphere

The cryosphere (from the Greek κρύος kryos, "cold", "frost" or "ice" and σφαῖρα sphaira, "globe, ball"[1]) is an all-encompassing term for those portions of Earth's surface where water is in solid form, including sea ice, lake ice, river ice, snow cover, glaciers, ice caps, ice sheets, and frozen ground (which includes permafrost). Thus, there is a wide overlap with the hydrosphere. The cryosphere is an integral part of the global climate system with important linkages and feedbacks generated through its influence on surface energy and moisture fluxes, clouds, precipitation, hydrology, atmospheric and oceanic circulation. Through these feedback processes, the cryosphere plays a significant role in the global climate and in climate model response to global changes. Approximately 10% of the Earth's surface is covered by ice, but this is rapidly decreasing.[2] The term deglaciation describes the retreat of cryospheric features. Cryology is the study of cryospheres.

Overview of the cryosphere and its larger components, from the

Structure

 
Extent of the regions affected by components of the cryosphere around the world from the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report
 
From The Cryosphere (2021 survey): Earth lost 28 trillion tonnes of ice between 1994 and 2017, with melting grounded ice (ice sheets and glaciers) raising the global sea level by 34.6 ±3.1 mm.[3] The rate of ice loss has risen by 57% since the 1990s − from 0.8 to 1.2 trillion tonnes per year.[3]

Frozen water is found on the Earth’s surface primarily as snow cover, freshwater ice in lakes and rivers, sea ice, glaciers, ice sheets, and frozen ground and permafrost (permanently frozen ground). The residence time of water in each of these cryospheric sub-systems varies widely. Snow cover and freshwater ice are essentially seasonal, and most sea ice, except for ice in the central Arctic, lasts only a few years if it is not seasonal. A given water particle in glaciers, ice sheets, or ground ice, however, may remain frozen for 10–100,000 years or longer, and deep ice in parts of East Antarctica may have an age approaching 1 million years.

Most of the world's ice volume is in Antarctica, principally in the East Antarctic Ice Sheet. In terms of areal extent, however, Northern Hemisphere winter snow and ice extent comprise the largest area, amounting to an average 23% of hemispheric surface area in January. The large areal extent and the important climatic roles of snow and ice, related to their unique physical properties, indicate that the ability to observe and model snow and ice-cover extent, thickness, and physical properties (radiative and thermal properties) is of particular significance for climate research.

There are several fundamental physical properties of snow and ice that modulate energy exchanges between the surface and the atmosphere. The most important properties are the surface reflectance (albedo), the ability to transfer heat (thermal diffusivity), and the ability to change state (latent heat). These physical properties, together with surface roughness, emissivity, and dielectric characteristics, have important implications for observing snow and ice from space. For example, surface roughness is often the dominant factor determining the strength of radar backscatter.[4] Physical properties such as crystal structure, density, length, and liquid water content are important factors affecting the transfers of heat and water and the scattering of microwave energy.

The surface reflectance of incoming solar radiation is important for the surface energy balance (SEB). It is the ratio of reflected to incident solar radiation, commonly referred to as albedo. Climatologists are primarily interested in albedo integrated over the shortwave portion of the electromagnetic spectrum (~300 to 3500 nm), which coincides with the main solar energy input. Typically, albedo values for non-melting snow-covered surfaces are high (~80–90%) except in the case of forests. The higher albedos for snow and ice cause rapid shifts in surface reflectivity in autumn and spring in high latitudes, but the overall climatic significance of this increase is spatially and temporally modulated by cloud cover. (Planetary albedo is determined principally by cloud cover, and by the small amount of total solar radiation received in high latitudes during winter months.) Summer and autumn are times of high-average cloudiness over the Arctic Ocean so the albedo feedback associated with the large seasonal changes in sea-ice extent is greatly reduced. Groisman et al.[5] observed that snow cover exhibited the greatest influence on Earth's radiative balance in the spring (April to May) period when incoming solar radiation was greatest over snow-covered areas.[5]

The thermal properties of cryospheric elements also have important climatic consequences. Snow and ice have much lower thermal diffusivities than air. Thermal diffusivity is a measure of the speed at which temperature waves can penetrate a substance. Snow and ice are many orders of magnitude less efficient at diffusing heat than air. Snow cover insulates the ground surface, and sea ice insulates the underlying ocean, decoupling the surface-atmosphere interface with respect to both heat and moisture fluxes. The flux of moisture from a water surface is eliminated by even a thin skin of ice, whereas the flux of heat through thin ice continues to be substantial until it attains a thickness in excess of 30 to 40 cm. However, even a small amount of snow on top of the ice will dramatically reduce the heat flux and slow down the rate of ice growth. The insulating effect of snow also has major implications for the hydrological cycle. In non-permafrost regions, the insulating effect of snow is such that only near-surface ground freezes and deep-water drainage is uninterrupted.[6]

While snow and ice act to insulate the surface from large energy losses in winter, they also act to retard warming in the spring and summer because of the large amount of energy required to melt ice (the latent heat of fusion, 3.34 x 105 J/kg at 0 °C). However, the strong static stability of the atmosphere over areas of extensive snow or ice tends to confine the immediate cooling effect to a relatively shallow layer, so that associated atmospheric anomalies are usually short-lived and local to regional in scale.[7] In some areas of the world such as Eurasia, however, the cooling associated with a heavy snowpack and moist spring soils is known to play a role in modulating the summer monsoon circulation.[8] Gutzler and Preston (1997) recently presented evidence for a similar snow-summer circulation feedback over the southwestern United States.[9]

The role of snow cover in modulating the monsoon is just one example of a short-term cryosphere-climate feedback involving the land surface and the atmosphere. From Figure 1 it can be seen that there are numerous cryosphere-climate feedbacks in the global climate system. These operate over a wide range of spatial and temporal scales from local seasonal cooling of air temperatures to hemispheric-scale variations in ice sheets over time scales of thousands of years. The feedback mechanisms involved are often complex and incompletely understood. For example, Curry et al. (1995) showed that the so-called "simple" sea ice-albedo feedback involved complex interactions with lead fraction, melt ponds, ice thickness, snow cover, and sea-ice extent.

Snow

Because of its close relationship with hemispheric air temperature, snow cover is an important indicator of climate change. Most of the Earth's snow-covered area is located in the Northern Hemisphere, and varies seasonally from 46.5 million km2 in January to 3.8 million km2 in August.[10] North American winter snow cover increased during the 20th century,[11][12] largely in response to an increase in precipitation.[13] However, the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report found that Northern Hemisphere snow cover has been decreasing since 1978, along with snow depth. [14] Paleoclimate observations show that such changes are unprecedented over the last millennia in Western North America.[15][16][14]

Snow cover is an extremely important storage component in the water balance, especially seasonal snowpacks in mountainous areas of the world. Though limited in extent, seasonal snowpacks in the Earth’s mountain ranges account for the major source of the runoff for stream flow and groundwater recharge over wide areas of the midlatitudes. For example, over 85% of the annual runoff from the Colorado River basin originates as snowmelt. Snowmelt runoff from the Earth's mountains fills the rivers and recharges the aquifers that over a billion people depend on for their water resources. Furthermore, over 40% of the world's protected areas are in mountains, attesting to their value both as unique ecosystems needing protection and as recreation areas for humans. Climate warming is expected to result in major changes to the partitioning of snow and rainfall, and to the timing of snowmelt, which will have important implications for water use and management. These changes also involve potentially important decadal and longer time-scale feedbacks to the climate system through temporal and spatial changes in soil moisture and runoff to the oceans.(Walsh 1995). Freshwater fluxes from the snow cover into the marine environment may be important, as the total flux is probably of the same magnitude as desalinated ridging and rubble areas of sea ice.[17] In addition, there is an associated pulse of precipitated pollutants which accumulate over the Arctic winter in snowfall and are released into the ocean upon ablation of the sea ice .

Sea ice

Sea ice covers much of the polar oceans and forms by freezing of sea water. Satellite data since the early 1970s reveal considerable seasonal, regional, and interannual variability in the sea ice covers of both hemispheres. Seasonally, sea-ice extent in the Southern Hemisphere varies by a factor of 5, from a minimum of 3–4 million km2 in February to a maximum of 17–20 million km2 in September.[18][19] The seasonal variation is much less in the Northern Hemisphere where the confined nature and high latitudes of the Arctic Ocean result in a much larger perennial ice cover, and the surrounding land limits the equatorward extent of wintertime ice. Thus, the seasonal variability in Northern Hemisphere ice extent varies by only a factor of 2, from a minimum of 7–9 million km2 in September to a maximum of 14–16 million km2 in March.[19][20]

The ice cover exhibits much greater regional-scale interannual variability than it does hemispherical. For instance, in the region of the Sea of Okhotsk and Japan, maximum ice extent decreased from 1.3 million km2 in 1983 to 0.85 million km2 in 1984, a decrease of 35%, before rebounding the following year to 1.2 million km2.[19] The regional fluctuations in both hemispheres are such that for any several-year period of the satellite record some regions exhibit decreasing ice coverage while others exhibit increasing ice cover.[21] The overall trend indicated in the passive microwave record from 1978 through mid-1995 shows that the extent of Arctic sea ice is decreasing 2.7% per decade.[22] Subsequent work with the satellite passive-microwave data indicates that from late October 1978 through the end of 1996 the extent of Arctic sea ice decreased by 2.9% per decade while the extent of Antarctic sea ice increased by 1.3% per decade.[23] The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change publication Climate change 2013: The Physical Science Basis stated that sea ice extent for the Northern Hemisphere showed a decrease of 3.8% ± 0.3% per decade from November 1978 to December 2012.[24]

Lake ice and river ice

Ice forms on rivers and lakes in response to seasonal cooling. The sizes of the ice bodies involved are too small to exert anything other than localized climatic effects. However, the freeze-up/break-up processes respond to large-scale and local weather factors, such that considerable interannual variability exists in the dates of appearance and disappearance of the ice. Long series of lake-ice observations can serve as a proxy climate record, and the monitoring of freeze-up and break-up trends may provide a convenient integrated and seasonally-specific index of climatic perturbations. Information on river-ice conditions is less useful as a climatic proxy because ice formation is strongly dependent on river-flow regime, which is affected by precipitation, snow melt, and watershed runoff as well as being subject to human interference that directly modifies channel flow, or that indirectly affects the runoff via land-use practices.

Lake freeze-up depends on the heat storage in the lake and therefore on its depth, the rate and temperature of any inflow, and water-air energy fluxes. Information on lake depth is often unavailable, although some indication of the depth of shallow lakes in the Arctic can be obtained from airborne radar imagery during late winter (Sellman et al. 1975) and spaceborne optical imagery during summer (Duguay and Lafleur 1997). The timing of breakup is modified by snow depth on the ice as well as by ice thickness and freshwater inflow.

Frozen ground and permafrost

Frozen ground (permafrost and seasonally frozen ground) occupies approximately 54 million km2 of the exposed land areas of the Northern Hemisphere (Zhang et al., 2003) and therefore has the largest areal extent of any component of the cryosphere. Permafrost (perennially frozen ground) may occur where mean annual air temperatures (MAAT) are less than −1 or −2 °C and is generally continuous where MAAT are less than −7 °C. In addition, its extent and thickness are affected by ground moisture content, vegetation cover, winter snow depth, and aspect. The global extent of permafrost is still not completely known, but it underlies approximately 20% of Northern Hemisphere land areas. Thicknesses exceed 600 m along the Arctic coast of northeastern Siberia and Alaska, but, toward the margins, permafrost becomes thinner and horizontally discontinuous. The marginal zones will be more immediately subject to any melting caused by a warming trend. Most of the presently existing permafrost formed during previous colder conditions and is therefore relic. However, permafrost may form under present-day polar climates where glaciers retreat or land emergence exposes unfrozen ground. Washburn (1973) concluded that most continuous permafrost is in balance with the present climate at its upper surface, but changes at the base depend on the present climate and geothermal heat flow; in contrast, most discontinuous permafrost is probably unstable or "in such delicate equilibrium that the slightest climatic or surface change will have drastic disequilibrium effects".[25]

Under warming conditions, the increasing depth of the summer active layer has significant impacts on the hydrologic and geomorphic regimes. Thawing and retreat of permafrost have been reported in the upper Mackenzie Valley and along the southern margin of its occurrence in Manitoba, but such observations are not readily quantified and generalized. Based on average latitudinal gradients of air temperature, an average northward displacement of the southern permafrost boundary by 50-to-150 km could be expected, under equilibrium conditions, for a 1 °C warming.

Only a fraction of the permafrost zone consists of actual ground ice. The remainder (dry permafrost) is simply soil or rock at subfreezing temperatures. The ice volume is generally greatest in the uppermost permafrost layers and mainly comprises pore and segregated ice in Earth material. Measurements of bore-hole temperatures in permafrost can be used as indicators of net changes in temperature regime. Gold and Lachenbruch (1973) infer a 2–4 °C warming over 75 to 100 years at Cape Thompson, Alaska, where the upper 25% of the 400-m thick permafrost is unstable with respect to an equilibrium profile of temperature with depth (for the present mean annual surface temperature of −5 °C). Maritime influences may have biased this estimate, however. At Prudhoe Bay similar data imply a 1.8 °C warming over the last 100 years (Lachenbruch et al. 1982). Further complications may be introduced by changes in snow-cover depths and the natural or artificial disturbance of the surface vegetation.

The potential rates of permafrost thawing have been established by Osterkamp (1984) to be two centuries or less for 25-meter-thick permafrost in the discontinuous zone of interior Alaska, assuming warming from −0.4 to 0 °C in 3–4 years, followed by a further 2.6 °C rise. Although the response of permafrost (depth) to temperature change is typically a very slow process (Osterkamp 1984; Koster 1993), there is ample evidence for the fact that the active layer thickness quickly responds to a temperature change (Kane et al. 1991). Whether, under a warming or cooling scenario, global climate change will have a significant effect on the duration of frost-free periods in both regions with seasonally and perennially frozen ground.

Glaciers and ice sheets

 
Representation of glaciers on a topographic map

Ice sheets and glaciers are flowing ice masses that rest on solid land. They are controlled by snow accumulation, surface and basal melt, calving into surrounding oceans or lakes and internal dynamics. The latter results from gravity-driven creep flow ("glacial flow") within the ice body and sliding on the underlying land, which leads to thinning and horizontal spreading.[26] Any imbalance of this dynamic equilibrium between mass gain, loss and transport due to flow results in either growing or shrinking ice bodies.

Ice sheets are the greatest potential source of global freshwater, holding approximately 77% of the global total. This corresponds to 80 m of world sea-level equivalent, with Antarctica accounting for 90% of this. Greenland accounts for most of the remaining 10%, with other ice bodies and glaciers accounting for less than 0.5%. Because of their size in relation to annual rates of snow accumulation and melt, the residence time of water in ice sheets can extend to 100,000 or 1 million years. Consequently, any climatic perturbations produce slow responses, occurring over glacial and interglacial periods. Valley glaciers respond rapidly to climatic fluctuations with typical response times of 10–50 years.[27] However, the response of individual glaciers may be asynchronous to the same climatic forcing because of differences in glacier length, elevation, slope, and speed of motion. Oerlemans (1994) provided evidence of coherent global glacier retreat which could be explained by a linear warming trend of 0.66 °C per 100 years.[27]

While glacier variations are likely to have minimal effects upon global climate, their recession may have contributed one-third to one-half of the observed 20th century rise in sea level (Meier 1984; IPCC 1996). Furthermore, it is extremely likely that such extensive glacier recession as is currently observed in the Western Cordillera of North America,[28] where runoff from glacierized basins is used for irrigation and hydropower, involves significant hydrological and ecosystem impacts. Effective water-resource planning and impact mitigation in such areas depends upon developing a sophisticated knowledge of the status of glacier ice and the mechanisms that cause it to change. Furthermore, a clear understanding of the mechanisms at work is crucial to interpreting the global-change signals that are contained in the time series of glacier mass balance records.

Combined glacier mass balance estimates of the large ice sheets carry an uncertainty of about 20%. Studies based on estimated snowfall and mass output tend to indicate that the ice sheets are near balance or taking some water out of the oceans.[29] Marine-based studies[30] suggest sea level rise from the Antarctic or rapid ice-shelf basal melting. Some authors (Paterson 1993; Alley 1997) have suggested that the difference between the observed rate of sea-level rise (roughly 2 mm/y) and the explained rate of sea-level rise from melting of mountain glaciers, thermal expansion of the ocean, etc. (roughly 1 mm/y or less) is similar to the modeled imbalance in the Antarctic (roughly 1 mm/y of sea-level rise; Huybrechts 1990), suggesting a contribution of sea-level rise from the Antarctic.

Relationships between global climate and changes in ice extent are complex. The mass balance of land-based glaciers and ice sheets is determined by the accumulation of snow, mostly in winter, and warm-season ablation due primarily to net radiation and turbulent heat fluxes to melting ice and snow from warm-air advection[31][32](Munro 1990). However, most of Antarctica never experiences surface melting.[33] Where ice masses terminate in the ocean, iceberg calving is the major contributor to mass loss. In this situation, the ice margin may extend out into deep water as a floating ice shelf, such as that in the Ross Sea. Despite the possibility that global warming could result in losses to the Greenland ice sheet being offset by gains to the Antarctic ice sheet,[34] there is major concern about the possibility of a West Antarctic Ice Sheet collapse. The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is grounded on bedrock below sea level, and its collapse has the potential of raising the world sea level 6–7 m (20–23 ft) over a few hundred years.

Most of the discharge of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is via the five major ice streams (faster flowing ice) entering the Ross Ice Shelf, the Rutford Ice Stream entering Filchner–Ronne Ice Shelf of the Weddell Sea, and the Thwaites Glacier and Pine Island Glacier entering the Amundsen Ice Shelf. Opinions differ as to the present mass balance of these systems (Bentley 1983, 1985), principally because of the limited data. The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is stable so long as the Ross Ice Shelf and Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf are constrained by drag along their lateral boundaries and pinned by local grounding of ice rises.

The Ice Ages

In glacial times, the cryosphere considerably increased its size to cover a considerable part of the lands of northern Eurasia and America, lowering the sea level by more than a hundred meters and creating large ice shelves that connected the entire north of the planet. Also thanks to this (and continental drift), the first hominids, which arose in Africa, were able to reach all parts of the world, which would then separate with the return to normal seas and oceans.

Science

"Cryospheric sciences" is an umbrella term for the study of the cryosphere (not unlike atmospheric sciences, encompassing meteorology, climatology, and aeronomy). As an interdisciplinary Earth science, many disciplines contribute to it, most notably geology, hydrology, and meteorology and climatology; in this sense, it is comparable to glaciology.

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Brown, R. D., and P. Cote, 1992: Inter annual variability in land fast ice thickness in the Canadian High Arctic, 1950–89. Arctic, 45, 273–284.
  • Chahine, M. T., 1992: The hydrological cycle and its influence on climate. Nature, 359, 373–380.
  • Flato, G. M., and R. D. Brown, 1996: Variability and climate sensitivity of landfast Arctic sea ice. J. Geophys. Res., 101(C10), 25,767–25,777.
  • Groisman, P. Ya, T. R. Karl, and R. W. Knight, 1994b: Changes of snow cover, temperature and radiative heat balance over the Northern Hemisphere. J. Climate, 7, 1633–1656.
  • Hughes, M. G., A. Frei, and D. A. Robinson, 1996: Historical analysis of North American snow cover extent: merging satellite and station-derived snow cover observations. Proc. 53rd Eastern Snow Conference, Williamsburg, Virginia, 21–31.
  • Huybrechts, P., 1990: The Antarctic ice sheet during the last glacial inter glacial cycle: a three-dimensional experiment. Annals of Glaciology, 14, 115–119.
  • IPCC, 1996: Climate Change 1995: The Science of Climate Change. Houghton, J. T., L. G. Meira Filho, B. A. Callander, N. Harris, A. Kattenberg, and K. Maskell (eds.), Contribution of WGI to the Second Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 572 pp.
  • Ledley, T. S., 1991: Snow on sea ice: competing effects in shaping climate. J. Geophys. Res., 96, 17,195–17,208.
  • Ledley, T. S., 1993: Variations in snow on sea ice: a mechanism for producing climate variations. J. Geophys. Res., 98(D6), 10,401–10,410.
  • Lynch-Stieglitz, M., 1994: The development and validation of a simple snow model for the GISS GCM. J. Climate, 7, 1842–1855.
  • Martin, S., K. Steffen, J. Comiso, D. Cavalieri, M. R. Drinkwater, and B. Holt, 1992: Microwave remote sensing of polynyas. In: Carsey, F. D. (ed.), Microwave remote sensing of sea ice, Washington, DC, American Geophysical Union, 1992, 303–311.
  • Meier, M. F., 1984: Contribution of small glaciers to global sea level rise. Science, 226, 1418–1421.
  • Parkinson, C. L., J. C. Comiso, H. J. Zwally, D. J. Cavalieri, P. Gloersen, and W. J. Campbell, 1987: Arctic Sea Ice, 1973–1976: Satellite Passive-Microwave Observations, NASA SP-489, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, Washington, D.C., 296 pp.
  • Paterson, W. S. B., 1993: World sea level and the present mass balance of the Antarctic ice sheet. In: W.R. Peltier (ed.), Ice in the Climate System, NATO ASI Series, I12, Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 131–140.
  • Robinson, D. A., K. F. Dewey, and R. R. Heim, 1993: Global snow cover monitoring: an update. Bull. Amer. Meteorol. Soc., 74, 1689–1696.
  • Steffen, K., and A. Ohmura, 1985: Heat exchange and surface conditions in North Water, northern Baffin Bay. Annals of Glaciology, 6, 178–181.
  • Van den Broeke, M. R., 1996: The atmospheric boundary layer over ice sheets and glaciers. Utrecht, Universities Utrecht, 178 pp.
  • Van den Broeke, M. R., and R. Bintanja, 1995: The interaction of katabatic wind and the formation of blue ice areas in East Antarctica. J. Glaciology, 41, 395–407.
  • Welch, H. E., 1992: Energy flow through the marine ecosystem of the Lancaster Sound region, Arctic Canada. Arctic, 45, 343.
  • Fedorov R. Cryogenic Resources: Ice, Snow, and Permafrost in Traditional Subsistence Systems in Russia. // Resources 2019, 8(1), 17, Cryogenic Resources: Ice, Snow, and Permafrost in Traditional Subsistence Systems in Russia
  • Arsuaga, J. L. "Un descubrimiento tan grande que nadie se ha dado cuenta" «Breve historia de la tierra con nosotros dentro» (in Spanish). Planeta editorial, S. A., 2, 2019, pages 13–17.

External links

  • Canadian Cryospheric Information Network
  • National Snow and Ice Data Center
  • . A video produced by the University of Washington, March 2008

cryosphere, scientific, journal, this, article, factual, accuracy, compromised, date, information, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, september, 2019, cryosphere, from, greek, κρύος, kryos, cold, frost,. For the scientific journal see The Cryosphere This article s factual accuracy may be compromised due to out of date information Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2019 The cryosphere from the Greek kryos kryos cold frost or ice and sfaῖra sphaira globe ball 1 is an all encompassing term for those portions of Earth s surface where water is in solid form including sea ice lake ice river ice snow cover glaciers ice caps ice sheets and frozen ground which includes permafrost Thus there is a wide overlap with the hydrosphere The cryosphere is an integral part of the global climate system with important linkages and feedbacks generated through its influence on surface energy and moisture fluxes clouds precipitation hydrology atmospheric and oceanic circulation Through these feedback processes the cryosphere plays a significant role in the global climate and in climate model response to global changes Approximately 10 of the Earth s surface is covered by ice but this is rapidly decreasing 2 The term deglaciation describes the retreat of cryospheric features Cryology is the study of cryospheres Overview of the cryosphere and its larger components from the UN Environment Programme Global Outlook for Ice and Snow Contents 1 Structure 1 1 Snow 1 2 Sea ice 1 3 Lake ice and river ice 1 4 Frozen ground and permafrost 1 5 Glaciers and ice sheets 1 6 The Ice Ages 2 Science 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksStructure Edit Extent of the regions affected by components of the cryosphere around the world from the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report From The Cryosphere 2021 survey Earth lost 28 trillion tonnes of ice between 1994 and 2017 with melting grounded ice ice sheets and glaciers raising the global sea level by 34 6 3 1 mm 3 The rate of ice loss has risen by 57 since the 1990s from 0 8 to 1 2 trillion tonnes per year 3 Frozen water is found on the Earth s surface primarily as snow cover freshwater ice in lakes and rivers sea ice glaciers ice sheets and frozen ground and permafrost permanently frozen ground The residence time of water in each of these cryospheric sub systems varies widely Snow cover and freshwater ice are essentially seasonal and most sea ice except for ice in the central Arctic lasts only a few years if it is not seasonal A given water particle in glaciers ice sheets or ground ice however may remain frozen for 10 100 000 years or longer and deep ice in parts of East Antarctica may have an age approaching 1 million years Most of the world s ice volume is in Antarctica principally in the East Antarctic Ice Sheet In terms of areal extent however Northern Hemisphere winter snow and ice extent comprise the largest area amounting to an average 23 of hemispheric surface area in January The large areal extent and the important climatic roles of snow and ice related to their unique physical properties indicate that the ability to observe and model snow and ice cover extent thickness and physical properties radiative and thermal properties is of particular significance for climate research There are several fundamental physical properties of snow and ice that modulate energy exchanges between the surface and the atmosphere The most important properties are the surface reflectance albedo the ability to transfer heat thermal diffusivity and the ability to change state latent heat These physical properties together with surface roughness emissivity and dielectric characteristics have important implications for observing snow and ice from space For example surface roughness is often the dominant factor determining the strength of radar backscatter 4 Physical properties such as crystal structure density length and liquid water content are important factors affecting the transfers of heat and water and the scattering of microwave energy The surface reflectance of incoming solar radiation is important for the surface energy balance SEB It is the ratio of reflected to incident solar radiation commonly referred to as albedo Climatologists are primarily interested in albedo integrated over the shortwave portion of the electromagnetic spectrum 300 to 3500 nm which coincides with the main solar energy input Typically albedo values for non melting snow covered surfaces are high 80 90 except in the case of forests The higher albedos for snow and ice cause rapid shifts in surface reflectivity in autumn and spring in high latitudes but the overall climatic significance of this increase is spatially and temporally modulated by cloud cover Planetary albedo is determined principally by cloud cover and by the small amount of total solar radiation received in high latitudes during winter months Summer and autumn are times of high average cloudiness over the Arctic Ocean so the albedo feedback associated with the large seasonal changes in sea ice extent is greatly reduced Groisman et al 5 observed that snow cover exhibited the greatest influence on Earth s radiative balance in the spring April to May period when incoming solar radiation was greatest over snow covered areas 5 The thermal properties of cryospheric elements also have important climatic consequences Snow and ice have much lower thermal diffusivities than air Thermal diffusivity is a measure of the speed at which temperature waves can penetrate a substance Snow and ice are many orders of magnitude less efficient at diffusing heat than air Snow cover insulates the ground surface and sea ice insulates the underlying ocean decoupling the surface atmosphere interface with respect to both heat and moisture fluxes The flux of moisture from a water surface is eliminated by even a thin skin of ice whereas the flux of heat through thin ice continues to be substantial until it attains a thickness in excess of 30 to 40 cm However even a small amount of snow on top of the ice will dramatically reduce the heat flux and slow down the rate of ice growth The insulating effect of snow also has major implications for the hydrological cycle In non permafrost regions the insulating effect of snow is such that only near surface ground freezes and deep water drainage is uninterrupted 6 While snow and ice act to insulate the surface from large energy losses in winter they also act to retard warming in the spring and summer because of the large amount of energy required to melt ice the latent heat of fusion 3 34 x 105 J kg at 0 C However the strong static stability of the atmosphere over areas of extensive snow or ice tends to confine the immediate cooling effect to a relatively shallow layer so that associated atmospheric anomalies are usually short lived and local to regional in scale 7 In some areas of the world such as Eurasia however the cooling associated with a heavy snowpack and moist spring soils is known to play a role in modulating the summer monsoon circulation 8 Gutzler and Preston 1997 recently presented evidence for a similar snow summer circulation feedback over the southwestern United States 9 The role of snow cover in modulating the monsoon is just one example of a short term cryosphere climate feedback involving the land surface and the atmosphere From Figure 1 it can be seen that there are numerous cryosphere climate feedbacks in the global climate system These operate over a wide range of spatial and temporal scales from local seasonal cooling of air temperatures to hemispheric scale variations in ice sheets over time scales of thousands of years The feedback mechanisms involved are often complex and incompletely understood For example Curry et al 1995 showed that the so called simple sea ice albedo feedback involved complex interactions with lead fraction melt ponds ice thickness snow cover and sea ice extent Snow Edit Because of its close relationship with hemispheric air temperature snow cover is an important indicator of climate change Most of the Earth s snow covered area is located in the Northern Hemisphere and varies seasonally from 46 5 million km2 in January to 3 8 million km2 in August 10 North American winter snow cover increased during the 20th century 11 12 largely in response to an increase in precipitation 13 However the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report found that Northern Hemisphere snow cover has been decreasing since 1978 along with snow depth 14 Paleoclimate observations show that such changes are unprecedented over the last millennia in Western North America 15 16 14 Snow cover is an extremely important storage component in the water balance especially seasonal snowpacks in mountainous areas of the world Though limited in extent seasonal snowpacks in the Earth s mountain ranges account for the major source of the runoff for stream flow and groundwater recharge over wide areas of the midlatitudes For example over 85 of the annual runoff from the Colorado River basin originates as snowmelt Snowmelt runoff from the Earth s mountains fills the rivers and recharges the aquifers that over a billion people depend on for their water resources Furthermore over 40 of the world s protected areas are in mountains attesting to their value both as unique ecosystems needing protection and as recreation areas for humans Climate warming is expected to result in major changes to the partitioning of snow and rainfall and to the timing of snowmelt which will have important implications for water use and management These changes also involve potentially important decadal and longer time scale feedbacks to the climate system through temporal and spatial changes in soil moisture and runoff to the oceans Walsh 1995 Freshwater fluxes from the snow cover into the marine environment may be important as the total flux is probably of the same magnitude as desalinated ridging and rubble areas of sea ice 17 In addition there is an associated pulse of precipitated pollutants which accumulate over the Arctic winter in snowfall and are released into the ocean upon ablation of the sea ice Sea ice Edit Sea ice covers much of the polar oceans and forms by freezing of sea water Satellite data since the early 1970s reveal considerable seasonal regional and interannual variability in the sea ice covers of both hemispheres Seasonally sea ice extent in the Southern Hemisphere varies by a factor of 5 from a minimum of 3 4 million km2 in February to a maximum of 17 20 million km2 in September 18 19 The seasonal variation is much less in the Northern Hemisphere where the confined nature and high latitudes of the Arctic Ocean result in a much larger perennial ice cover and the surrounding land limits the equatorward extent of wintertime ice Thus the seasonal variability in Northern Hemisphere ice extent varies by only a factor of 2 from a minimum of 7 9 million km2 in September to a maximum of 14 16 million km2 in March 19 20 The ice cover exhibits much greater regional scale interannual variability than it does hemispherical For instance in the region of the Sea of Okhotsk and Japan maximum ice extent decreased from 1 3 million km2 in 1983 to 0 85 million km2 in 1984 a decrease of 35 before rebounding the following year to 1 2 million km2 19 The regional fluctuations in both hemispheres are such that for any several year period of the satellite record some regions exhibit decreasing ice coverage while others exhibit increasing ice cover 21 The overall trend indicated in the passive microwave record from 1978 through mid 1995 shows that the extent of Arctic sea ice is decreasing 2 7 per decade 22 Subsequent work with the satellite passive microwave data indicates that from late October 1978 through the end of 1996 the extent of Arctic sea ice decreased by 2 9 per decade while the extent of Antarctic sea ice increased by 1 3 per decade 23 The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change publication Climate change 2013 The Physical Science Basis stated that sea ice extent for the Northern Hemisphere showed a decrease of 3 8 0 3 per decade from November 1978 to December 2012 24 Lake ice and river ice Edit Ice forms on rivers and lakes in response to seasonal cooling The sizes of the ice bodies involved are too small to exert anything other than localized climatic effects However the freeze up break up processes respond to large scale and local weather factors such that considerable interannual variability exists in the dates of appearance and disappearance of the ice Long series of lake ice observations can serve as a proxy climate record and the monitoring of freeze up and break up trends may provide a convenient integrated and seasonally specific index of climatic perturbations Information on river ice conditions is less useful as a climatic proxy because ice formation is strongly dependent on river flow regime which is affected by precipitation snow melt and watershed runoff as well as being subject to human interference that directly modifies channel flow or that indirectly affects the runoff via land use practices Lake freeze up depends on the heat storage in the lake and therefore on its depth the rate and temperature of any inflow and water air energy fluxes Information on lake depth is often unavailable although some indication of the depth of shallow lakes in the Arctic can be obtained from airborne radar imagery during late winter Sellman et al 1975 and spaceborne optical imagery during summer Duguay and Lafleur 1997 The timing of breakup is modified by snow depth on the ice as well as by ice thickness and freshwater inflow Frozen ground and permafrost Edit Frozen ground permafrost and seasonally frozen ground occupies approximately 54 million km2 of the exposed land areas of the Northern Hemisphere Zhang et al 2003 and therefore has the largest areal extent of any component of the cryosphere Permafrost perennially frozen ground may occur where mean annual air temperatures MAAT are less than 1 or 2 C and is generally continuous where MAAT are less than 7 C In addition its extent and thickness are affected by ground moisture content vegetation cover winter snow depth and aspect The global extent of permafrost is still not completely known but it underlies approximately 20 of Northern Hemisphere land areas Thicknesses exceed 600 m along the Arctic coast of northeastern Siberia and Alaska but toward the margins permafrost becomes thinner and horizontally discontinuous The marginal zones will be more immediately subject to any melting caused by a warming trend Most of the presently existing permafrost formed during previous colder conditions and is therefore relic However permafrost may form under present day polar climates where glaciers retreat or land emergence exposes unfrozen ground Washburn 1973 concluded that most continuous permafrost is in balance with the present climate at its upper surface but changes at the base depend on the present climate and geothermal heat flow in contrast most discontinuous permafrost is probably unstable or in such delicate equilibrium that the slightest climatic or surface change will have drastic disequilibrium effects 25 Under warming conditions the increasing depth of the summer active layer has significant impacts on the hydrologic and geomorphic regimes Thawing and retreat of permafrost have been reported in the upper Mackenzie Valley and along the southern margin of its occurrence in Manitoba but such observations are not readily quantified and generalized Based on average latitudinal gradients of air temperature an average northward displacement of the southern permafrost boundary by 50 to 150 km could be expected under equilibrium conditions for a 1 C warming Only a fraction of the permafrost zone consists of actual ground ice The remainder dry permafrost is simply soil or rock at subfreezing temperatures The ice volume is generally greatest in the uppermost permafrost layers and mainly comprises pore and segregated ice in Earth material Measurements of bore hole temperatures in permafrost can be used as indicators of net changes in temperature regime Gold and Lachenbruch 1973 infer a 2 4 C warming over 75 to 100 years at Cape Thompson Alaska where the upper 25 of the 400 m thick permafrost is unstable with respect to an equilibrium profile of temperature with depth for the present mean annual surface temperature of 5 C Maritime influences may have biased this estimate however At Prudhoe Bay similar data imply a 1 8 C warming over the last 100 years Lachenbruch et al 1982 Further complications may be introduced by changes in snow cover depths and the natural or artificial disturbance of the surface vegetation The potential rates of permafrost thawing have been established by Osterkamp 1984 to be two centuries or less for 25 meter thick permafrost in the discontinuous zone of interior Alaska assuming warming from 0 4 to 0 C in 3 4 years followed by a further 2 6 C rise Although the response of permafrost depth to temperature change is typically a very slow process Osterkamp 1984 Koster 1993 there is ample evidence for the fact that the active layer thickness quickly responds to a temperature change Kane et al 1991 Whether under a warming or cooling scenario global climate change will have a significant effect on the duration of frost free periods in both regions with seasonally and perennially frozen ground Glaciers and ice sheets Edit Representation of glaciers on a topographic map Ice sheets and glaciers are flowing ice masses that rest on solid land They are controlled by snow accumulation surface and basal melt calving into surrounding oceans or lakes and internal dynamics The latter results from gravity driven creep flow glacial flow within the ice body and sliding on the underlying land which leads to thinning and horizontal spreading 26 Any imbalance of this dynamic equilibrium between mass gain loss and transport due to flow results in either growing or shrinking ice bodies Ice sheets are the greatest potential source of global freshwater holding approximately 77 of the global total This corresponds to 80 m of world sea level equivalent with Antarctica accounting for 90 of this Greenland accounts for most of the remaining 10 with other ice bodies and glaciers accounting for less than 0 5 Because of their size in relation to annual rates of snow accumulation and melt the residence time of water in ice sheets can extend to 100 000 or 1 million years Consequently any climatic perturbations produce slow responses occurring over glacial and interglacial periods Valley glaciers respond rapidly to climatic fluctuations with typical response times of 10 50 years 27 However the response of individual glaciers may be asynchronous to the same climatic forcing because of differences in glacier length elevation slope and speed of motion Oerlemans 1994 provided evidence of coherent global glacier retreat which could be explained by a linear warming trend of 0 66 C per 100 years 27 While glacier variations are likely to have minimal effects upon global climate their recession may have contributed one third to one half of the observed 20th century rise in sea level Meier 1984 IPCC 1996 Furthermore it is extremely likely that such extensive glacier recession as is currently observed in the Western Cordillera of North America 28 where runoff from glacierized basins is used for irrigation and hydropower involves significant hydrological and ecosystem impacts Effective water resource planning and impact mitigation in such areas depends upon developing a sophisticated knowledge of the status of glacier ice and the mechanisms that cause it to change Furthermore a clear understanding of the mechanisms at work is crucial to interpreting the global change signals that are contained in the time series of glacier mass balance records Combined glacier mass balance estimates of the large ice sheets carry an uncertainty of about 20 Studies based on estimated snowfall and mass output tend to indicate that the ice sheets are near balance or taking some water out of the oceans 29 Marine based studies 30 suggest sea level rise from the Antarctic or rapid ice shelf basal melting Some authors Paterson 1993 Alley 1997 have suggested that the difference between the observed rate of sea level rise roughly 2 mm y and the explained rate of sea level rise from melting of mountain glaciers thermal expansion of the ocean etc roughly 1 mm y or less is similar to the modeled imbalance in the Antarctic roughly 1 mm y of sea level rise Huybrechts 1990 suggesting a contribution of sea level rise from the Antarctic Relationships between global climate and changes in ice extent are complex The mass balance of land based glaciers and ice sheets is determined by the accumulation of snow mostly in winter and warm season ablation due primarily to net radiation and turbulent heat fluxes to melting ice and snow from warm air advection 31 32 Munro 1990 However most of Antarctica never experiences surface melting 33 Where ice masses terminate in the ocean iceberg calving is the major contributor to mass loss In this situation the ice margin may extend out into deep water as a floating ice shelf such as that in the Ross Sea Despite the possibility that global warming could result in losses to the Greenland ice sheet being offset by gains to the Antarctic ice sheet 34 there is major concern about the possibility of a West Antarctic Ice Sheet collapse The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is grounded on bedrock below sea level and its collapse has the potential of raising the world sea level 6 7 m 20 23 ft over a few hundred years Most of the discharge of the West Antarctic Ice Sheet is via the five major ice streams faster flowing ice entering the Ross Ice Shelf the Rutford Ice Stream entering Filchner Ronne Ice Shelf of the Weddell Sea and the Thwaites Glacier and Pine Island Glacier entering the Amundsen Ice Shelf Opinions differ as to the present mass balance of these systems Bentley 1983 1985 principally because of the limited data The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is stable so long as the Ross Ice Shelf and Filchner Ronne Ice Shelf are constrained by drag along their lateral boundaries and pinned by local grounding of ice rises The Ice Ages Edit In glacial times the cryosphere considerably increased its size to cover a considerable part of the lands of northern Eurasia and America lowering the sea level by more than a hundred meters and creating large ice shelves that connected the entire north of the planet Also thanks to this and continental drift the first hominids which arose in Africa were able to reach all parts of the world which would then separate with the return to normal seas and oceans Science Edit Cryospheric sciences is an umbrella term for the study of the cryosphere not unlike atmospheric sciences encompassing meteorology climatology and aeronomy As an interdisciplinary Earth science many disciplines contribute to it most notably geology hydrology and meteorology and climatology in this sense it is comparable to glaciology See also EditClimate system Cryobiology Effects of climate change on the cryosphere Glaciology International Glaciological Society IGS International Association of Cryospheric Sciences IACS Polar regions of Earth Physical impacts of climate change Retreat of glaciers since 1850References Edit sfaῖra Archived 2017 05 10 at the Wayback Machine Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon on Perseus Global Ice Viewer Climate Change Vital Signs of the Planet climate nasa gov Retrieved 27 November 2021 a b Slater Thomas Lawrence Isobel R Otosaka Ines N Shepherd Andrew et al 25 January 2021 Review article Earth s ice imbalance The Cryosphere 15 1 233 246 Bibcode 2021TCry 15 233S doi 10 5194 tc 15 233 2021 ISSN 1994 0416 Fig 4 Hall Dorothy K 1985 Remote Sensing of Ice and Snow Dordrecht Springer Netherlands ISBN 978 94 009 4842 6 a b Groisman Pavel Ya Karl Thomas R Knight Richard W 14 January 1994 Observed Impact of Snow Cover on the Heat Balance and the Rise of Continental Spring Temperatures Science 263 5144 198 200 Bibcode 1994Sci 263 198G doi 10 1126 science 263 5144 198 PMID 17839175 S2CID 9932394 Retrieved 25 February 2022 Lynch Stieglitz M 1994 The development and validation of a simple snow model for the GISS GCM J Climate 7 1842 1855 Cohen J and D Rind 1991 The effect of snow cover on the climate J Climate 4 689 706 Vernekar A D J Zhou and J Shukla 1995 The effect of Eurasian snow cover on the Indian monsoon J Climate 8 248 266 Gutzler David S Preston Jessica W 1997 09 01 Evidence for a relationship between spring snow cover in North America and summer rainfall in New Mexico Geophysical Research Letters 24 17 2207 2210 Bibcode 1997GeoRL 24 2207G doi 10 1029 97gl02099 ISSN 1944 8007 Robinson D A K F Dewey and R R Heim 1993 Global snow cover monitoring an update Bull Amer Meteorol Soc 74 1689 1696 Brown Ross D Goodison Barry E Brown Ross D Goodison Barry E 1996 06 01 Interannual Variability in Reconstructed Canadian Snow Cover 1915 1992 Journal of Climate 9 6 1299 1318 Bibcode 1996JCli 9 1299B doi 10 1175 1520 0442 1996 009 lt 1299 ivircs gt 2 0 co 2 Hughes M G Frei A Robinson D A 1996 Historical analysis of North American snow cover extent merging satellite and station derived snow cover observations Proceedings of the Annual Meeting Eastern Snow Conference Williamsburg Virginia Eastern Snow Conference pp 21 31 ISBN 9780920081181 Groisman P Ya and D R Easterling 1994 Variability and trends of total precipitation and snowfall over the United States and Canada J Climate 7 184 205 a b Fox Kemper B Hewitt H T Xiao C Adalgeirsdottir G Drijfhout S S Edwards T L Golledge N R Hemer M Kopp R E Krinner G Mix A 2021 Masson Delmotte V Zhai P Pirani A Connors S L Pean C Berger S Caud N Chen Y Goldfarb L eds Ocean Cryosphere and Sea Level Change Climate Change 2021 The Physical Science Basis Contribution of Working Group I to the Sixth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Cambridge University Press Cambridge UK and New York NY USA 2021 1283 1285 doi 10 1017 9781009157896 011 inactive 31 December 2022 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint DOI inactive as of December 2022 link Pederson Gregory T Gray Stephen T Woodhouse Connie A Betancourt Julio L Fagre Daniel B Littell Jeremy S Watson Emma Luckman Brian H Graumlich Lisa J 2011 07 15 The Unusual Nature of Recent Snowpack Declines in the North American Cordillera Science 333 6040 332 335 Bibcode 2011Sci 333 332P doi 10 1126 science 1201570 ISSN 0036 8075 PMID 21659569 S2CID 29486298 Belmecheri Soumaya Babst Flurin Wahl Eugene R Stahle David W Trouet Valerie 2016 Multi century evaluation of Sierra Nevada snowpack Nature Climate Change 6 1 2 3 Bibcode 2016NatCC 6 2B doi 10 1038 nclimate2809 ISSN 1758 6798 Prinsenberg S J 1988 Ice cover and ice ridge contributions to the freshwater contents of Hudson Bay and Foxe Basin Arctic 41 6 11 Zwally H J J C Comiso C L Parkinson W J Campbell F D Carsey and P Gloersen 1983 Antarctic Sea Ice 1973 1976 Satellite Passive Microwave Observations NASA SP 459 National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington D C 206 pp a b c Gloersen P W J Campbell D J Cavalieri J C Comiso C L Parkinson and H J Zwally 1992 Arctic and Antarctic Sea Ice 1978 1987 Satellite Passive Microwave Observations and Analysis NASA SP 511 National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington D C 290 pp Parkinson C L J C Comiso H J Zwally D J Cavalieri P Gloersen and W J Campbell 1987 Arctic Sea Ice 1973 1976 Satellite Passive Microwave Observations NASA SP 489 National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington D C 296 pp Parkinson C L 1995 Recent sea ice advances in Baffin Bay Davis Strait and retreats in the Bellinshausen Sea Annals of Glaciology 21 348 352 Johannessen O M M Miles and E Bjorgo 1995 The Arctic s shrinking sea ice Nature 376 126 127 Cavalieri D J P Gloersen C L Parkinson J C Comiso and H J Zwally 1997 Observed hemispheric asymmetry in global sea ice changes Science 278 1104 1106 Climate Change 2013 The Physical Science Basis PDF ipcc Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change p 324 Archived PDF from the original on 2014 11 11 Retrieved 16 June 2015 Washburn A L 1973 Periglacial processes and environments Edward Arnold London 320 pp p 48 Greve R Blatter H 2009 Dynamics of Ice Sheets and Glaciers Springer doi 10 1007 978 3 642 03415 2 ISBN 978 3 642 03414 5 a b Oerlemans J 1994 Quantifying global warming from the retreat of glaciers Science 264 243 245 Pelto M S 1996 Annual net balance of North Cascade Glaciers 1984 94 J Glaciology 42 3 9 Bentley C R and M B Giovinetto 1991 Mass balance of Antarctica and sea level change In G Weller C L Wilson and B A B Severin eds Polar regions and climate change University of Alaska Fairbanks p 481 488 Jacobs S S H H Helmer C S M Doake A Jenkins and R M Frohlich 1992 Melting of ice shelves and the mass balance of Antarctica J Glaciology 38 375 387 Paterson W S B 1993 World sea level and the present mass balance of the Antarctic ice sheet In W R Peltier ed Ice in the Climate System NATO ASI Series I12 Springer Verlag Berlin 131 140 Van den Broeke M R 1996 The atmospheric boundary layer over ice sheets and glaciers Utrecht Universitiet Utrecht 178 pp Van den Broeke M R and R Bintanja 1995 The interaction of katabatic wind and the formation of blue ice areas in East Antarctica J Glaciology 41 395 407 Ohmura A M Wild and L Bengtsson 1996 A possible change in mass balance of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets in the coming century J Climate 9 2124 2135 Further reading EditBrown R D and P Cote 1992 Inter annual variability in land fast ice thickness in the Canadian High Arctic 1950 89 Arctic 45 273 284 Chahine M T 1992 The hydrological cycle and its influence on climate Nature 359 373 380 Flato G M and R D Brown 1996 Variability and climate sensitivity of landfast Arctic sea ice J Geophys Res 101 C10 25 767 25 777 Groisman P Ya T R Karl and R W Knight 1994b Changes of snow cover temperature and radiative heat balance over the Northern Hemisphere J Climate 7 1633 1656 Hughes M G A Frei and D A Robinson 1996 Historical analysis of North American snow cover extent merging satellite and station derived snow cover observations Proc 53rd Eastern Snow Conference Williamsburg Virginia 21 31 Huybrechts P 1990 The Antarctic ice sheet during the last glacial inter glacial cycle a three dimensional experiment Annals of Glaciology 14 115 119 IPCC 1996 Climate Change 1995 The Science of Climate Change Houghton J T L G Meira Filho B A Callander N Harris A Kattenberg and K Maskell eds Contribution of WGI to the Second Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Cambridge University Press Cambridge UK 572 pp Ledley T S 1991 Snow on sea ice competing effects in shaping climate J Geophys Res 96 17 195 17 208 Ledley T S 1993 Variations in snow on sea ice a mechanism for producing climate variations J Geophys Res 98 D6 10 401 10 410 Lynch Stieglitz M 1994 The development and validation of a simple snow model for the GISS GCM J Climate 7 1842 1855 Martin S K Steffen J Comiso D Cavalieri M R Drinkwater and B Holt 1992 Microwave remote sensing of polynyas In Carsey F D ed Microwave remote sensing of sea ice Washington DC American Geophysical Union 1992 303 311 Meier M F 1984 Contribution of small glaciers to global sea level rise Science 226 1418 1421 Parkinson C L J C Comiso H J Zwally D J Cavalieri P Gloersen and W J Campbell 1987 Arctic Sea Ice 1973 1976 Satellite Passive Microwave Observations NASA SP 489 National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington D C 296 pp Paterson W S B 1993 World sea level and the present mass balance of the Antarctic ice sheet In W R Peltier ed Ice in the Climate System NATO ASI Series I12 Springer Verlag Berlin 131 140 Robinson D A K F Dewey and R R Heim 1993 Global snow cover monitoring an update Bull Amer Meteorol Soc 74 1689 1696 Steffen K and A Ohmura 1985 Heat exchange and surface conditions in North Water northern Baffin Bay Annals of Glaciology 6 178 181 Van den Broeke M R 1996 The atmospheric boundary layer over ice sheets and glaciers Utrecht Universities Utrecht 178 pp Van den Broeke M R and R Bintanja 1995 The interaction of katabatic wind and the formation of blue ice areas in East Antarctica J Glaciology 41 395 407 Welch H E 1992 Energy flow through the marine ecosystem of the Lancaster Sound region Arctic Canada Arctic 45 343 Fedorov R Cryogenic Resources Ice Snow and Permafrost in Traditional Subsistence Systems in Russia Resources 2019 8 1 17 Cryogenic Resources Ice Snow and Permafrost in Traditional Subsistence Systems in Russia Arsuaga J L Un descubrimiento tan grande que nadie se ha dado cuenta Breve historia de la tierra con nosotros dentro in Spanish Planeta editorial S A 2 2019 pages 13 17 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cryosphere Cryosphere overview map from the UN Environment Programme Canadian Cryospheric Information Network Near real time overview of global ice concentration and snow extent National Snow and Ice Data Center ResearchChannel Cryospheric Response to Climate Change A video produced by the University of Washington March 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cryosphere amp oldid 1133509608, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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