Melting Away
Glacier holds big surprise

Belcher glacier, Devon Island, Nunavut, Canada.
A glacier range the size of the state of New York surprisingly contributes 10 percent of the world's melting ice, making it a primary contributor to rising sea levels. "The Canadian Arctic, which we previously thought wasn't contributing very much to ice loss, has actually become one of the largest contributors," said study researcher Alex Gardner at the University of Michigan. "Most of the world's fresh water is stored in glaciers and caps, and they are one of the primary drivers of sea level change." [In Photos: Amazing Glaciers] Researchers have been watching this glacier range in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago for decades, but because of its remote location they weren't able to get accurate readings of how much it was being affected by the gradually increasing temperatures, particularly in summer, which some researchers attribute to global warming, though it's hard to say over the short term of this study. NASA , in making ice loss estimates in the 1990s, had determined that the glacier had been losing volume. Gardner looked at more recent changes: during the years 2004 to 2009. Over that study period, he found, the glacier lost a volume equivalent to about 75 percent of Lake Erie, the majority of that loss happening between 2007 and 2009. In these years, the loss was four times what it had been in the late 1990s. Studying remote glaciers The Canadian Arctic Archipelago includes thousands of islands covering 550,000 square miles (1.4 million square kilometers), nearly the size of Alaska. It is home to one of the largest freshwater glacier ranges on Earth, which has 3½ times the volume of the combined Great Lakes. To test how much ice these glaciers were losing, Gardner's team created a computer model and used climate data from 2004 to 2009. They noticed this dramatic loss of ice and called colleagues to confirm their findings. A colleague from Oslo University in Norway, working with the ICESat, a NASA satellite that can measure elevation using a laser beam from space, confirmed Gardner's findings that the glaciers had been losing volume. A third team from the Netherlands, working with the GRACE satellite, a joint venture between NASA and the University of Texas, also confirmed the findings.
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