HomeNewsWorldRain falls at Greenland ice summit for first time on record

Rain falls at Greenland ice summit for first time on record

Temperatures at the ice cap almost never lift above freezing, but have now done so three times in less than a decade.

August 21, 2021 / 08:37 IST
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A satellite image shows Nuuk Fjord, Greenland. (Image: Reuters)
A satellite image shows Nuuk Fjord, Greenland. (Image: Reuters)

Rain fell at the highest point on the Greenland ice sheet last week for the first time on record, another worrying sign of warming for the ice sheet already melting at an increasing rate, scientists said on August 20.

"That's not a healthy sign for an ice sheet," said Indrani Das, a glaciologist with Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. "Water on ice is bad. … It makes the ice sheet more prone to surface melt."

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Not only is water warmer than the usual snow, it's also darker -- so it absorbs more sunlight rather than reflecting it away.

That meltwater is streaming into the ocean, causing sea levels to rise. Already, melting from Greenland's ice sheet --the world's second-largest after Antarctica's -- has caused around 25 percent of global sea level rise seen over the last few decades, scientists estimate. That share is expected to grow, as global temperatures increase.