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Response to Comment by T. SCAMBOS and C. SHUMAN (2016) on ‘Mass gains of the Antarctic ice sheet exceed losses’ by H. J. Zwally and others (2015)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2016

H. JAY ZWALLY*
Affiliation:
Cryospheric Sciences Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
JUN LI
Affiliation:
SGT, Inc., NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
JOHN W. ROBBINS
Affiliation:
Craig Technologies, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
JACK L. SABA
Affiliation:
Science Systems and Applications, Inc., NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
DONGHUI YI
Affiliation:
SGT, Inc., NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
ANITA C. BRENNER
Affiliation:
Sigma Space Corporation, Lanham, MD, USA
*
E-mail: H. Jay Zwally <[email protected]>
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Abstract

Type
Letter
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2016

Scambos and Shuman (Reference Scambos and Shuman2016) state: ‘This need for an improved understanding (of ice mass balance) extends beyond the glaciological community and includes policy makers and the general public.’ For this reason, we believe it is important as scientists to make our best efforts to provide the most accurate results, and not merely accept previously published results without critical evaluation. Scambos and Shuman’ assert that our ‘result …. is inconsistent with a large body of previously published work’ and that ‘The…. conclusion is clearly an outlier among recent studies of Antarctic mass balance.’ They base their assertions on a selective overview of previously published work, ignoring papers that do not agree with their view, overlooking uncertainties in prior work, and not recognizing the need for continued improvement. They rely heavily on the Ice Mass Balance Intercomparison Exercise (IMBIE) (Shepherd and others, Reference Shepherd2012), which they say ‘was a reconciliation of nearly all high quality mass balance estimates at that time’. However, IMBIE simply took the mean of selected estimates and did not actually reconcile significant differences in the sense of investigating or explaining their causes. An important review paper not mentioned by Scambos and Shuman’ is Hanna and others (Reference Hanna2013) that reviewed the progress following IMBIE, discussed the remaining uncertainties and likely causes, and recommended additional research, especially for East Antarctica (EA).

We fully believe our paper represents an advancement in scientific knowledge, based on rigorous analysis and reduction of uncertainties. We continue to have high confidence in our results and conclusions. We carefully considered prior work in relation to ours and provided reasons why our results differed from key other papers. Overall, we believe the concerns expressed by Scambos and Shuman’ would have been substantially alleviated by a thorough reading of our paper with attention to the scientific and technical details we provided about our methodologies, the arguments we made, the supporting analyses, and our supporting references to other peer-reviewed literature.

Our results are in essential agreement with other studies that show an increasing mass loss in the Antarctic Peninsula and the Thwaites and Pine Island region of West Antarctica (WA), where large changes are observed over relatively small areas, but differ in the interior of West Antarctica (WA2) and EA, where the changes are small over large areas. Very importantly, Scambos and Shuman’ fail to recognize the significance of our ERS-1/ERS-2 results for EA and their very close agreement with our ICESat results, both in general over their common observation region north of 81.5°S and in particular over Lake Vostok. Previous unrefuted results based on ERS-1 and ERS-2 showing ice-sheet growth in EA include: Wingham and others (Reference Wingham, Ridout, Scharroo, Arthern and Shum1998); Davis and others (Reference Davis, Li, McConnell, Frey and Hanna2005); Zwally and others (Reference Zwally2005), and Wingham and others (Reference Wingham, Shepherd, Muir and Marshall2006). In particular, Davis and others’ found: ‘Using a near-surface snow density of 350 kg m−3, an average elevation change of 1.8 ± 0.3 cm a −1 (from ERS-1/ERS-2 radar altimeter data) over an area of 7.1 million km2 for the EA interior (Table S1) corresponds to a mass gain of 45 ± 7 Gt a−1; their corrected result would be 117 ± 18 Gt a−1 using the appropriate density of ice, because the increase in elevation has been shown to not be from increasing snowfall. Furthermore, the accuracy of ERS-1/ERS-2 altimetry for constructing time series is demonstrated by its measurement of global sea-level rise in good agreement with TOPEX and other ocean radar altimeters at the rate of 2.7 mm a−1 (Scharroo and others, Reference Scharroo2013).

Scambos and Shuman’ assert that the ICESat data are not accurate, but provided no valid evidence to support their assertions. Their critique of ICESat accuracy is based on questions about the ICESat inter-campaign biases and the GLAS saturation corrections. However, they do not recognize the advantages of our well-documented methodology (in numerous peer-reviewed papers) for determining the biases to the ocean level in the Arctic and Antarctic sea-ice packs, including accounting for changes in the ocean level independently measured by Envisat radar altimetry. We applied the latest refined and accurate saturation range corrections that have been available on the GLAS data products at NSIDC since 2012, but need to be applied to the products by the users. However, Scambos and Shuman’ apparently have not updated their analysis of the saturation errors over Lake Vostok using those more accurate corrections (See Supplemental Material (SM)).

Scambos and Shuman’ argue that we differ from other ‘recent’ studies, especially for EA. In our paper (in particular the last three paragraphs of Results and Discussion; Zwally and others, Reference Zwally2015), we discuss principal reasons why we believe other results differed from ours, noting likely deficiencies in methodologies. Regarding the IMBIE differences in EA, we noted: ‘In contrast, for EA the reconciled mean of +24 ± 36 Gt a−1 contained the means and most of the ranges of only the radar altimetry (RA) and gravity (GR) results. The EA mean from Input/Output Method (IOM) was more negative at −30 ± 76 Gt a−1 and the mean from laser altimetry (LA) was more positive at +109 ± 57 Gt a−1. Variations among the LA estimates were due to different methods of estimating dM/dt from dH/dt, differing choices for the ICESat inter-campaign biases, differing methods of dh/dt solutions, and different data-editing procedures, which have been improved for our EA mass gain of +136 ± 28 Gt a−1 ’.

Technical reasons for differences included: ‘Possible causes for the lower (IMBIE) RA estimate of +22 ± 39 Gt a−1 for EA are inadequate corrections to the Envisat data for variable radar penetration depth (as discussed in the Appendix) and the use of a low (relative) density of 0.35 to estimate dM/dt from dH/dt assuming the changes were due to snowfall anomalies (as discussed in Section 4). A likely cause for the lower GR estimate is the sensitivity of the GR estimates to the glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) correction, as discussed in the Appendix where we note that a −1.6 mm a−1 change in the modeled dB/dt would bring the GR and our dM/dt into agreement at approximately +150 Gt a−1.’

Figure 1 of Scambos and Shuman’, with its nine GRACE gravimetry results, three altimetry results, and the IMBIE ‘consensus’ average result, should be compared with the similar (but more comprehensive and informative) Fig. 1 of Hanna and others (Reference Hanna2013) that separated pre-2012 studies from 2012 studies. The separation showed the evolution toward results that are more-narrowly distributed between +100 and −100 Gt a−1, with the deletion of earlier more negative values (except for the more negative IOM, ‘Mass Budget’ results). In particular, Hanna and others’ reviewed the advances in modeling of the GIA (caused by the motion dB/dt of the underlying bedrock) that have led to a reduction in GIA uncertainties in GRACE estimates and closer agreement with altimetry results. As we discussed, gravimetry results are approximately six times more sensitive to errors in dB/dt than altimetry results. Hanna and others’ also note: ‘However, several key challenges remain. First, changes in ice extent and thickness during the past millennium are poorly known, and typically not included in GIA models, despite the fact that they can dominate the present-day rebound signal, especially in regions of low mantle viscosity’. In our paper, we said: ‘The additional ice loading from a dynamic thickening of 1.59 cm a–1 over EA (Table 2) for 10 ka implies an additional bedrock depression of 27 m continuing at a rate of 2.65 mm a–1 assuming full long-term isostatic adjustment. Therefore, the −1.6 mm a–1 needed to bring the gravimetry and altimetry dM/dt estimates into agreement is only 60% of the full isostatic adjustment rate, and therefore within the range of what can be expected if the ice loading implied by the long-term dynamic thickening is accounted for in the GIA models.’ Therefore, a common error in the GIA correction to the nine GRACE results is a distinct possibility needing further investigation.

The other two altimetry-based results (Helm and others, Reference Helm, Humbert and Miller2014; McMillan and others, Reference McMillan2014) in Fig. 1 of Scambos and Shuman’ are based on CryoSat radar-altimeter data with issues regarding: (1) the estimated density used to derive mass changes; (2) the accuracy of linear trends derived from only 3 a of data; and (3) the reliability of corrections made for the highly variable penetration of the radar signal into the firn. As described in Rémy and others (Reference Rémy, Flament, Blarel and Benveniste2012), the penetration depth is strongly dependent on the orientation of the linearly polarized radar signal relative to the anisotropy of the scattering properties of the firn, which causes systematic elevation biases at orbital crossovers (see SM). McMillan and others’ apply a ‘backscatter’ correction (without details), and Helm and others’ simply add a random uncertainty of 0.5 m to their error estimate. Also, Helm and others’ might not have applied the G/C correction.

Scambos and Shuman’ state: ‘In fact, observed EAIS velocities are~80% of the balance velocities in recent estimates (van Wessum and others, 2014).’ However, their implied imbalance of ~20% is not inconsistent with our estimate of ~13%. As we stated: ‘A residual thickening from the Holocene increase in accumulation is consistent with the characteristic slow response time of the ice flow to accumulation changes in EA. Comparing the 147 Gt a−1 dynamic gain with SMB gives a current residual dynamic imbalance of ~13%’. ‘In the interior areas of the ice sheet, dynamic response times are much longer than in the higher accumulation and thinner areas closer to the coastal margins. For example, in the interior of EA where the accumulation is low (e.g. 0.03 m a–1) and the ice is thick (e.g. 2500 m), the ice thickness increase over 10 ka (for a doubling of accumulation) is only ~300 m. The corresponding fractional increase in driving stress over that time is only ~12%, implying the flow takes a very long time to adjust to the change.’ A more appropriate description of the long-term time-dependent behavior is given by a 3-D ice-sheet model incorporating anisotropic ice flow and fully coupled dynamics and thermodynamics (Wang and others, Reference Wang, Li and Zwally2012), which showed a present-day thickening rate of 2.5 cm a−1 in central EA resulting from an step increase from 40% of present-day accumulation rates to present-day values 10 ka ago (Wang and others, Reference Wang, Li and Zwally2013). The modeled 2.5 cm a−1 thickening rate was nearly linear over the last 10 ka causing a thickness increase of 250 m at present, followed by a decreasing rate of thickening to an asymptotic thickness increase of 400 m in another 40 ka.

Scambos and Shuman’ assert: ‘… few EAIS interior areas… actually show similar trends… the ERS trend oscillates around 0 cm a−1, and is generally lower than… ICESat trend. South of 81.5°S, Zwally 2015 use only the ICESat-based estimate… increasing the dependence of… conclusions on… ICESat… ’. The ERS and ICESat data have similar trends in dH/dt over EA, and essentially identical trends in the dynamic component dH d/dt, neither of which ‘oscillate around 0 cm a−1’ . Over all of EA (our Table 2), the average dH/dt from ERS and ICESat are 1.11 and 1.30 cm a−1 and the dH d/dt are 1.58 and 1.59 cm a−1. Over the common observation area north of 81.5°S, the respective dH/dt averages are similar at 1.07 and 1.31 cm a−1 and the dH d/dt are 1.44  and 1.69 cm a−1. Therefore, our conclusions for the common area would be essentially the same as for all of EA.

Scambos and Shuman’ fail to recognize the critical importance of our advanced methodology for deriving accurate mass changes (dM/dt) from measured elevation changes (dH/dt). We compared our methodology with the outdated methodology of simply guessing a value of the relative density (ρ g) to calculate dM/dt = ρ g · dH/dt, where ρ g may range by a factor of three from 0.3 for compacted snow to 0.91 for solid ice. Our calculations for various density definitions in Table 4 illustrate the impossibility of choosing a valid single value of ρ g to estimate dM/dt from dH/dt. The primary reason a valid ρ g cannot be chosen is that the measured dH/dt are highly-variable combinations of accumulation-driven elevation change (dH a/dt), for which the relative density (ρ a) ranges from 0.2 to 0.91 with an average of 0.39 as shown in our Fig. 8, and dynamic-driven changes (dH d/dt), for which the appropriate relative density (ρ i) is 0.91. In addition, the values are often of opposite sign at the same location.

Overall, our results and conclusions provide new evidence on changes in the mass balance of Antarctica over the last two decades. When combined with evidence of accumulation increases that commenced 10 ka ago, we concluded that long-term thickening in EA is continuing to have a small beneficial impact on the current rate of global sea-level rise. At present, the long-term mass increase in EA continues to offset the recent marked increases in mass loss observed in WA and the AP. Important questions for continued research include: how fast will climate-induced increases in dynamic thinning proceed, and how might future increases in precipitation with climate warming provide additional offsets.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL

The supplementary material for this article giving additional specifics regarding: (1) Saturation Corrections, (2) ICESat Inter-campaign Biases, (3) G-C Correction, (4) Radar-Backscatter Correction and (5) Miscellaneous points including the Scambos and Shuman’ references to media coverage can be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jog.2016.91.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We very much appreciate the insightful comments and suggestions of an anonymous reviewer, the numerous engineers and scientists dedicated to the success of the ICESat mission, and the continued support of NASA management.

References

REFERENCES

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