The Greenland ice sheet poured 197 billion tons of water into the North Atlantic in July alone

Washington Post logoOngoing extreme melt event continues, with more than half the ice sheet experiencing melting on July 31.

When one thinks of Greenland, images of an icebound, harsh and forbidding landscape probably come to mind, not a landscape of ice pocked with melt ponds and streams transformed into raging rivers. And almost certainly not one that features wildfires.

Yet the latter description is exactly what Greenland looks like today, according to imagery shared on social media, scientists on the ground and data from satellites.

An extraordinary melt event that began earlier this week continues on Thursday on the Greenland ice sheet, and there are signs that about 60 percent of the expansive ice cover has seen detectable surface melting, including at higher elevations that only rarely see temperatures climb above freezing.

View the complete August 1 article by Andrew Freedman and Jason Samenow on The Washington Post website here.