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Published September 7, 2016 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Application of GRACE to the assessment of model-based estimates of monthly Greenland Ice Sheet mass balance (2003–2012)

Abstract

Abstract. Quantifying the Greenland Ice Sheet's future contribution to sea level rise is a challenging task that requires accurate estimates of ice sheet sensitivity to climate change. Forward ice sheet models are promising tools for estimating future ice sheet behavior, yet confidence is low because evaluation of historical simulations is challenging due to the scarcity of continental-wide data for model evaluation. Recent advancements in processing of Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) data using Bayesian-constrained mass concentration ("mascon") functions have led to improvements in spatial resolution and noise reduction of monthly global gravity fields. Specifically, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's JPL RL05M GRACE mascon solution (GRACE_JPL) offers an opportunity for the assessment of model-based estimates of ice sheet mass balance (MB) at ∼ 300 km spatial scales. Here, we quantify the differences between Greenland monthly observed MB (GRACE_JPL) and that estimated by state-of-the-art, high-resolution models, with respect to GRACE_JPL and model uncertainties. To simulate the years 2003–2012, we force the Ice Sheet System Model (ISSM) with anomalies from three different surface mass balance (SMB) products derived from regional climate models. Resulting MB is compared against GRACE_JPL within individual mascons. Overall, we find agreement in the northeast and southwest where MB is assumed to be primarily controlled by SMB. In the interior, we find a discrepancy in trend, which we presume to be related to millennial-scale dynamic thickening not considered by our model. In the northwest, seasonal amplitudes agree, but modeled mass trends are muted relative to GRACE_JPL. Here, discrepancies are likely controlled by temporal variability in ice discharge and other related processes not represented by our model simulations, i.e., hydrological processes and ice–ocean interaction. In the southeast, GRACE_JPL exhibits larger seasonal amplitude than predicted by the models while simultaneously having more pronounced trends; thus, discrepancies are likely controlled by a combination of missing processes and errors in both the SMB products and ISSM. At the margins, we find evidence of consistent intra-annual variations in regional MB that deviate distinctively from the SMB annual cycle. Ultimately, these monthly-scale variations, likely associated with hydrology or ice–ocean interaction, contribute to steeper negative mass trends observed by GRACE_JPL. Thus, models should consider such processes at relatively high (monthly-to-seasonal) temporal resolutions to achieve accurate estimates of Greenland MB.

Additional Information

© Author(s) 2016. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License. This work was performed at the California Institute of Technology's Jet Propulsion Laboratory under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Cryosphere Program. The contribution from J. E. Box was supported by Geocenter Denmark. The authors would like to acknowledge the data provided by the National Snow and Ice Data Center DAAC, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, Operation IceBridge, as well as CReSIS data generated from NSF grant ANT-0424589 and NASA grant NNX10AT68G (Gogineni, 2012). This work was made possible through model development of the ISSM team, including invaluable guidance in model setup by Helene Seroussi and incorporation of the most recent BedMachine bedmap of Greenland provided by Mathieu Morlighem. The authors would also like to thank Alex Gardner for his invaluable contribution, including discussion and advice pertaining to the periphery; GRACE_JPL team members, in particular Carmen Boening and Isabella Velicogna, for their support and advice with respect to interpretation of the GRACE solution; and Beata Csatho for sharing results of altimetrically derived trends over the Greenland Ice Sheet. Finally, the authors would like to extend gratitude towards four anonymous referees for their helpful comments and discussions pertaining to this paper.

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Published - tc-10-1965-2016.pdf

Supplemental Material - tc-10-1965-2016-supplement.pdf

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August 22, 2023
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