Researchers found that melting on the island passed a tipping point 20 years ago. The smallest glaciers and ice caps on the coast are no longer able to regrow lost ice.
The new study suggests that the melting of Greenland's coastal ice will raise global sea level by about 1.5 inches by 2100.
The findings reveal why the parts of Greenland ice are melting so quickly - the deep snow layer that normally captures coastal meltwater was filled to capacity in 1997.
It is bad news, but not immediate cause for panic, said Ohio State University glaciologist Ian Howat.
The findings apply to the comparatively small amount of ice along the coast only, he explained - not the Greenland Ice Sheet, which is the second largest ice cache in the world.
"These peripheral glaciers and ice caps can be thought of as colonies of ice that are in rapid decline, many of which will likely disappear in the near future," said Howat, associate professor at Ohio State.
The problem lies between fresh surface snow and the ice, in a layer of older snow called the firn. Normally, meltwater drains through gaps in the firn down to the ice surface, where the bottom layer re-freezes.
When the firn around Greenland's edges became fully saturated 20 years ago, it froze through from bottom to top.
Since then, there have not been any gaps to capture meltwater, and the ice has not been able to grow.
Howat provided the first two with his Greenland Ice Mapping Project Digital Elevation Model, which offers 30-metre resolution over the entire Greenland surface.
Then his colleagues were able to use that data to boost the resolution of their numerical model and get a better idea of where and how the ice caps and glaciers were losing mass.
They found that, for the last 20 years, mass loss has been exactly equal to the amount of meltwater runoff lost to sea. Simulations showed that a frozen firn was the most likely cause.
The real value of the study is that provides "more evidence of rapid change and how it happens," he added.
The study was published in the journal Nature Communications.
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