Alarming spike: Greenland sees hottest temperatures in 1,000 years
A boat navigates at night next to large icebergs near the town of Kulusuk, in eastern Greenland, Aug. 15, 2019. (AP Photo)


Greenland, the world’s largest island located between the Arctic and Atlantic oceans, has seen an alarmingly sharp spike in temperatures since 1995 as new ice core data revealed that the giant northern island is 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) hotter than its 20th-century average, the warmest in more than 1,000 years.

Until now, Greenland ice cores – a glimpse into long-running temperatures before thermometers – hadn’t shown much of a clear signal of global warming on the remotest north-central part of the island, at least compared to the rest of the world. But the ice cores also hadn’t been updated since 1995. Newly analyzed cores drilled in 2011 show a dramatic rise in temperature in the previous 15 years, according to a study in Wednesday’s journal Nature.

"We keep on (seeing) rising temperatures between the 1990s and 2011," said study lead author Maria Hoerhold, a glaciologist at the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany. "We now have a clear signature of global warming."

It takes years to analyze ice-core data. Hoerhold has new cores from 2019 but hasn’t finished studying them yet. She expects the temperature rise to continue as Greenland’s ice sheet and glaciers have been melting faster recently.

"This is an important finding and corroborates the suspicion that the ‘missing warming’ in the ice cores is because the cores end before the strong warming sets in," said climate scientist Martin Stendel of the Danish Meteorological Institute, who wasn’t part of the research.

The ice cores chart Greenland’s proxy temperatures from 1000 to 2011. It shows temperatures gently sloping cooler for the first 800 years, then wiggling up and down while dipping warmer until a sharp and sudden spike hotter from the 1990s. One scientist compared it to a hockey stick, a description used for other long-term temperature data showing climate change.

The jump in temperature after 1995 is much more significant than pre-industrial times before the mid-19th century that there is "almost zero" chance that it is anything but human-caused climate change, Hoerhold said.

The warming spike also mirrors a sudden rise in the amount of water running off from Greenland’s melting ice, the study finds.

What had been happening in Greenland is that natural weather variability, undulations because of an occasional weather system called Greenland blocking, in the past had masked human-caused climate change, Hoerhold said.

But she said that about 25 years ago, the warming became too big to be hidden.

Past data also showed Greenland not warming as fast as the rest of the Arctic, which is now warming four times faster than the global average. But the island appears to be catching up.

Ice core data for years showed Greenland acted differently from the Arctic. That’s likely because of Greenland blocking, Hoerhold said. Other scientists said Greenland was less affected by melting sea ice and other water factors as a giant land mass compared to the rest of the Arctic, which is much more water-adjacent.

Hoerhold’s team drilled five new cores near old cores to match established ice core records. Then, they use the difference between two different types of oxygen isotopes found in the ice to calculate temperature, using an already established formula that is checked against observed data.

Hoerhold and outside scientists said the new warming data is terrible news because Greenland’s ice sheet is melting. The study ends with data from 2011 and the following year had a record melt across Greenland, and the island’s ice loss has been high since then, she said.

"We should be very concerned about North Greenland warming because that region has a dozen sleeping giants in the form of wide tidewater glaciers and an ice stream," said Danish Meteorological Institute ice scientist Jason Box. And he said when awakened, it will ramp up melt from Greenland.

And that means "rising seas that threaten homes, businesses, economies, and communities," said U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center Deputy Lead Scientist Twila Moon.