Spatial Impacts of Climate Change. Denis Mercier

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Spatial Impacts of Climate Change - Denis Mercier


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mountains at almost all latitudes, permafrost, snow, lake and river ice, and sea ice and icebergs (see Figure 2.1). The cryosphere is thus seasonal (snow) or multi-millennia (ice sheets, permafrost).

      Table 2.1. The components of the cryosphere. The marine cryosphere is not included in this table because the melting of the sea ice does not induce sea level rise

       (source: Francou and Vincent 2011)

Cryosphere component Surface area in km2 Volume in km3 (water equivalent) Sea level equivalent (the surface of the oceans represents 361 million km2)
Antarctica 12.4 million 27 million 65 m
Greenland 1.8 million 2.7 million 7 m
Permafrost 23 million 0.24 million 1.1 m
Mountain glaciers 0.43 million 0.08 million 0.24 m
Snow 4 to 46 million 500 to 5000 0.1 to 1 cm
Photo depicts the extension of the cryosphere.

      Figure 2.1. Extension of the cryosphere. For a color version of this figure, see www.iste.co.uk/mercier/climate.zip

      (source: © Hugo Ahlenius, UNEP/GRID-Arendal)

      Moreover, the cryosphere is sensitive to the fundamental role played by albedo. The bright surfaces of the marine and terrestrial cryosphere reflect a significant proportion of solar radiation (see Chapter 1). Snow reflects 75-95% of the sun's energy, glaciers 40-60%. The reduction of these areas with a high albedo potential automatically leads to an increase in areas that absorb more solar radiation and, through a positive feedback loop, contribute to the warming of the lower layers of the atmosphere.

      2.3.1. The melting of the Arctic sea ice

      Between 1979 and 2019, the Arctic sea ice lost 12.9% of its surface area per decade, representing a loss of half of its surface area by the end of the melt season (see Figure 2.2). As a result, in September 2019, Arctic sea ice occupied just over 4 million km2, compared to almost 8 million km2 in 1979. This trend represented a loss of 82,400 km2 per year between 1979 and 2019. Beyond this four-decade trend,

      Figure 2.2 shows that the melting of the sea ice has in fact slowed over the last 13 years (2007-2019).

Graph depicts the average arctic sea ice extent for the month of September between 1979 and 2019.

      (source: National Snow and Ice Data Center).

Photos depict the spatial extent of arctic sea ice of September 1, 1980 and on September 1 2012 the year in which the extension was the least in the last four decades.

      (source: The Cryosphere Today)

Schematic illustration of (a) Thermodynamic feedback loops; (b) direct mechanics; and (c) indirect mechanics, all explaining the melting of the Arctic <hr><noindex><a href=Скачать книгу