ice sheet
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- Also called:
- continental glacier
- Related Topics:
- nunatak
- ice stream
- Cordilleran Ice Sheet
- Antarctic Ice Sheet
- outlet glacier
ice sheet, any glacier that extends in continuous sheets, moving outward in all directions, whose area exceeds more than 50,000 square km (19,000 square miles). In general, such expanses of frozen water are called ice sheets if they are the size of Antarctica or Greenland and ice caps if they are smaller. During the 2020s ice sheets covered roughly 10 percent of Earth’s land area. Together, ice sheets and glaciers contain about 69 percent of the fresh water on Earth. The sections of ice sheets that extend outward from the coast and over the ocean are called ice shelves. For a full description of glaciers and the processes that affect them, see glacier.
Present-day ice sheets
Two great ice masses, the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets, stand out in the world today and may be similar in many respects to the large ice sheets of the Pleistocene Epoch (about 2,588,000 to 11,700 years ago). About 99 percent of the world’s glacier ice resides in these two ice masses, with 91 percent held in Antarctica alone.
Greenland
The Greenland Ice Sheet, which covers some 80 percent of Greenland, is massive compared with other glaciers in the world except that of Antarctica. A single large ice sheet extends over about 1,700,000 square km (656,000 square miles), while other isolated glaciers and small ice caps totaling between 76,000 and 100,000 square km (about 29,000 and 39,000 square miles) occur around the periphery. The ice sheet extends from about latitudes 60° N to 80° N, and it is almost 2,200 km (1,380 miles) long in a north-south direction, with its greatest width being approximately 1,100 km (680 miles) at a latitude of 77° N, near its northern margin. The mean elevation of the ice surface is 2,135 meters (7,000 feet).
The bedrock surface is near sea level over most of the interior of Greenland, but mountains occur around the periphery. Thus, this ice sheet, in contrast to the Antarctic Ice Sheet, is confined along most of its margin. The ice surface reaches its greatest elevation on two north-south elongated domes, or ridges. The southern dome reaches almost 3,000 meters (about 9,800 feet) at latitudes 63°–65° N; the northern dome reaches about 3,290 meters (10,790 feet) about latitude 72° N. The island hosts some 2,900,000 cubic kilometers (696,000 cubic miles) of ice, which would raise global sea levels by 7.4 meters (24 feet) if melted completely.
The unconfined ice sheet does not reach the sea along a broad front anywhere in Greenland, and no large ice shelves occur. The ice margin just reaches the sea, however, in a region of irregular topography in the area of Melville Bay southeast of Thule. Large outlet glaciers, which are restricted tongues of the ice sheet, move through bordering valleys around the periphery of Greenland to calve off into the ocean, producing the numerous icebergs that sometimes cross North Atlantic shipping lanes. The best known of these is the Jakobshavn Glacier, which, at its terminus, typically flows at speeds of 20–22 meters (about 66–72 feet) per day, which can increase during the summer months to as much as 46 meters (150 feet) per day.
Antarctica
Antarctica, in contrast, hosts the world’s largest present-day ice sheet. The continent is about 14,200,000 square km (5,500,000 square miles) in size, and thick ice covers about 98 percent of its bedrock. Mountain ranges and isolated nunataks (a term derived from Greenland’s Inuit language, used for individual mountains surrounded by ice) locally protrude through the ice. The ice shelves are extensive in area. The ice sheet, with its associated ice shelves, covers an area of 13,829,000 square km (5,340,000 square miles); exposed rock areas total less than 200,000 square km (77,200 square miles).
The mean thickness of the ice is about 1,800 meters (5,900 feet), and the volume of the ice sheet contains about 29,000,000 cubic kilometers (7,000,000 cubic miles) of ice, representing about 90 percent of the world’s ice and 80 percent of its fresh water. The land surface beneath the ice is below sea level in many places, but this surface is depressed because of the weight of the ice. If the ice sheet were melted, global sea levels would probably rise about 45–60 meters (150–200 feet) and uplift of the land surface would eventually leave only a few deep troughs and basins below sea level. Because of the thick ice cover, Antarctica has by far the highest mean elevation of the continents.
Pleistocene ice sheets
Researchers note that during periods in Earth’s past—such as the Cryogenian Period (about 720,000,000 to 635,000,000 years ago) and Carboniferous Period (about 358,900,000 to 298,900,000 years ago)—gargantuan ice sheets covered much of the planet’s surface; however, the most recent period of significant glaciation occurred during the Pleistocene Epoch. During this interval, Greenland and Antarctica were covered in ice, but so were large parts of North America and Europe. The largest ice sheets in North America were the Cordilleran Ice Sheet (which was similar to the present-day Greenland Ice Sheet in size, extending south from Alaska to northern Washington and east from the Pacific Ocean to the Rocky Mountains) and the Laurentide Ice Sheet (which rivaled the present-day Antarctic Ice Sheet in size, extending more than 13,000,000 square km [5,000,000 square miles] across Canada and the northern United States).
Extensive parts of Eurasia were also covered by ice domes and large glaciers during the Pleistocene, but the largest contiguous mass of ice was contained within the Scandinavian Ice Sheet (also called the Fennoscandian Ice Sheet). At its maximum extent, the Scandinavian Ice Sheet nearly reached latitude 48° N. It is estimated to have covered about 6,600,000 square km (2,500,000 square miles) and attained a thickness of up to 3,000 meters (9,800 feet).