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A rapidly converging initialisation method to simulate the present-day Greenland ice sheet using the GRISLI ice sheet model (version 1.3)
Providing reliable projections of the ice sheet contribution to future sea-level rise has become one of the main challenges of the ice sheet modelling community. To increase confidence in future projections, a good knowledge of the present-day state of ice flow dynamics, which is critically dependen...
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Published in: | Geoscientific Model Development 2019-06, Vol.12 (6), p.2481-2499 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Providing reliable projections of the ice sheet contribution to future
sea-level rise has become one of the main challenges of the ice sheet
modelling community. To increase confidence in future projections, a good
knowledge of the present-day state of ice flow dynamics, which is critically
dependent on basal conditions, is strongly needed. The main difficulty is
tied to the scarcity of observations at the ice–bed interface at the scale of
the whole ice sheet, resulting in poorly constrained parameterisations in ice
sheet models. To circumvent this drawback, inverse modelling approaches can
be developed to infer initial conditions for ice sheet models that best
reproduce available data. Most often such approaches allow for a good
representation of the mean present-day state of the ice sheet but are
accompanied with unphysical trends. Here, we present an initialisation method
for the Greenland ice sheet using the thermo-mechanical hybrid GRISLI (GRenoble Ice Shelf and Land Ice) ice sheet model. Our approach is based on the adjustment of the basal drag
coefficient that relates the sliding velocities at the ice–bed interface to
basal shear stress in unfrozen bed areas. This method relies on an iterative
process in which the basal drag is periodically adjusted in such a way that
the simulated ice thickness matches the observed one. The quality of the
method is assessed by computing the root mean square errors in ice thickness
changes. Because the method is based on an adjustment of the sliding
velocities only, the results are discussed in terms of varying ice flow
enhancement factors that control the deformation rates. We show that this
factor has a strong impact on the minimisation of ice thickness errors and
has to be chosen as a function of the internal thermal state of the ice sheet
(e.g. a low enhancement factor for a warm ice sheet). While the method
performance slightly increases with the duration of the minimisation
procedure, an ice thickness root mean square error (RMSE) of 50.3 m is obtained in only 1320 model
years. This highlights a rapid convergence and demonstrates that the method
can be used for computationally expensive ice sheet models. |
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ISSN: | 1991-9603 1991-962X 1991-959X 1991-9603 1991-962X 1991-959X |
DOI: | 10.5194/gmd-12-2481-2019 |