In mid-August last year, we were covering an unusual late-summer heatwave on the Greenland Ice Sheet. It was the latest in the season that a surface melt event so large—affecting more than 800,000 square kilometers (309,000 square miles, which is a little bigger than Texas)—had ever occurred. It was so warm that rain, not snow, was observed for the first time at Summit Station, the highest location on the ice sheet.
Now here we are again in 2022. Ice experts at the National Snow and Ice Data Center reported in their Greenland Today blog that an even later late-summer heatwave had set a new record on Greenland. On September 3, temperatures were above freezing at Summit Station—elevation 3,200 meters, or 10,500 feet—the first time that’s happened in September. The heat triggered a spike in surface melt that affected nearly 600,000 square kilometers (232,000 square miles), which is about a third of the ice sheet. That’s smaller than last year’s event, but weeks later into the season.
In most years, the melt area on Greenland peaks in July with short, intense melt events typically around 600,000 square kilometers, but with high variability. By early September, few melt events exceed 200,000 square kilometers. Before this year, the only time such a large melt event occurred so late in the summer was in 2003, when surface melt area spiked to 602,000 square kilometers on August 27.
Continue reading at NOAA Climate
Image via NOAA Climate