Committed retreat: controls on glacier disequilibrium in a warming climate

The widespread retreat of mountain glaciers is a striking emblem of recent climate change. Yet mass-balance observations indicate that many glaciers are out of equilibrium with current climate, meaning that observed retreats do not show the full response to warming. This is a fundamental consequence...

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發表在:Journal of Glaciology
Main Authors: JOHN ERICH CHRISTIAN, MICHELLE KOUTNIK, GERARD ROE
格式: Article
語言:英语
出版: Cambridge University Press 2018-08-01
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在線閱讀:https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0022143018000576/type/journal_article
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author JOHN ERICH CHRISTIAN
MICHELLE KOUTNIK
GERARD ROE
author_facet JOHN ERICH CHRISTIAN
MICHELLE KOUTNIK
GERARD ROE
author_sort JOHN ERICH CHRISTIAN
collection DOAJ
container_title Journal of Glaciology
description The widespread retreat of mountain glaciers is a striking emblem of recent climate change. Yet mass-balance observations indicate that many glaciers are out of equilibrium with current climate, meaning that observed retreats do not show the full response to warming. This is a fundamental consequence of glacier dynamics: mountain glaciers typically have multidecadal response timescales, and so their response lags centennial-scale climate trends. A substantial difference between transient and equilibrium glacier length persists throughout the warming period; we refer to this length difference as ‘disequilibrium’. Forcing idealized glacier geometries with gradual warming shows that the glacier response timescale fundamentally governs the evolution of disequilibrium. Comparing a hierarchy of different glacier models suggests that accurate estimates of ice thickness and climatology, which control the timescale, are more important than higher order ice dynamics for capturing disequilibrium. Current glacier disequilibrium has previously been estimated for a selection of individual glaciers; our idealized modeling shows that sustained disequilibrium is a fundamental response of glacier dynamics, and is robust across a range of glacier geometries. This implies that many mountain glaciers are committed to additional, kilometer-scale retreats, even without further warming. Disequilibrium must also be addressed when calibrating glacier models used for climate reconstructions and projections of retreat in response to future warming.
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spelling doaj-art-be95f2ce868b4bd6aff3ee2dffeed5302025-08-28T15:29:49ZengCambridge University PressJournal of Glaciology0022-14301727-56522018-08-016467568810.1017/jog.2018.57Committed retreat: controls on glacier disequilibrium in a warming climateJOHN ERICH CHRISTIAN0MICHELLE KOUTNIK1GERARD ROE2Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USADepartment of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USADepartment of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USAThe widespread retreat of mountain glaciers is a striking emblem of recent climate change. Yet mass-balance observations indicate that many glaciers are out of equilibrium with current climate, meaning that observed retreats do not show the full response to warming. This is a fundamental consequence of glacier dynamics: mountain glaciers typically have multidecadal response timescales, and so their response lags centennial-scale climate trends. A substantial difference between transient and equilibrium glacier length persists throughout the warming period; we refer to this length difference as ‘disequilibrium’. Forcing idealized glacier geometries with gradual warming shows that the glacier response timescale fundamentally governs the evolution of disequilibrium. Comparing a hierarchy of different glacier models suggests that accurate estimates of ice thickness and climatology, which control the timescale, are more important than higher order ice dynamics for capturing disequilibrium. Current glacier disequilibrium has previously been estimated for a selection of individual glaciers; our idealized modeling shows that sustained disequilibrium is a fundamental response of glacier dynamics, and is robust across a range of glacier geometries. This implies that many mountain glaciers are committed to additional, kilometer-scale retreats, even without further warming. Disequilibrium must also be addressed when calibrating glacier models used for climate reconstructions and projections of retreat in response to future warming.https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0022143018000576/type/journal_articleclimate changeglacier fluctuationsglacier modelingopen climate campaign
spellingShingle JOHN ERICH CHRISTIAN
MICHELLE KOUTNIK
GERARD ROE
Committed retreat: controls on glacier disequilibrium in a warming climate
climate change
glacier fluctuations
glacier modeling
open climate campaign
title Committed retreat: controls on glacier disequilibrium in a warming climate
title_full Committed retreat: controls on glacier disequilibrium in a warming climate
title_fullStr Committed retreat: controls on glacier disequilibrium in a warming climate
title_full_unstemmed Committed retreat: controls on glacier disequilibrium in a warming climate
title_short Committed retreat: controls on glacier disequilibrium in a warming climate
title_sort committed retreat controls on glacier disequilibrium in a warming climate
topic climate change
glacier fluctuations
glacier modeling
open climate campaign
url https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0022143018000576/type/journal_article
work_keys_str_mv AT johnerichchristian committedretreatcontrolsonglacierdisequilibriuminawarmingclimate
AT michellekoutnik committedretreatcontrolsonglacierdisequilibriuminawarmingclimate
AT gerardroe committedretreatcontrolsonglacierdisequilibriuminawarmingclimate