Greenland’s Hidden Ice Boils with Pasta-Style Convection

TL;DR Summary
New computer modeling of Greenland’s ice sheet suggests deep plume-like structures arise from thermal convection—a heat-driven, slow churning process that may make some ice softer than previously thought. While this explains the plumes, researchers caution softer ice alone doesn’t automatically mean faster melt or higher sea-level rise, and further studies are needed to understand the full implications for the ice sheet’s mass balance and coastal impacts.
- Greenland’s Freaky Ice Plumes May Be Fueled by Wild, Pasta-Like Churning Gizmodo
- The ice on Greenland is acting strangely: Scientists believe they finally know why Phys.org
- Scientists may have just solved one of the strangest mysteries of Greenland’s ice sheet Scientific American
- Mysterious Plumes in Greenland Ice Sheets Puzzled Scientists for Years. They Finally Figured Out Why Green Matters
- Researchers Solve Mystery of Swirling, Plume-Like Structures Deep Inside Greenland’s Ice Sheet Sci.News
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