Geothermal Influence on Basal Ice Temperatures
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
3M ago
We have a new open-access study out in the current volume of The Cryosphere that looks at geothermal heat flow beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet. Geothermal heat flow is an important boundary condition for ice flow models because it influences the temperature of the ice-bed interface, which in turn influences how easily ice can deform and flow. Right now, there are about seven widely used estimates of geothermal heat flow beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet (Figure 1). These different heat flow maps come from different research groups, using different methods. It hasn’t been entirely clear what the ..read more
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Bedrock Uplift from Greenland’s Peripheral Glaciers
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
3M ago
We have a new article in the current issue of Geophysical Research Letters that looks at the influence of Greenland’s peripheral glaciers on vertical bedrock motion. Greenland’s bedrock is currently uplifting, due to both slow mantle-deformation processes associated with ice loss at the end of the Last Glacial Period, and fast elastic processes associated with ice loss today. The vertical bedrock uplift being measured in Greenland today ranges from a couple millimeters to a couple centimeters across the country. Understanding the magnitude and spatial distribution of this uplift helps us under ..read more
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Melting ice reveals two-million-year old peat
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
7M ago
     This week, in an open-access Boreas article, we describe a new Early Pleistocene peat deposit in Northwest Greenland. We discovered the deposit quite accidentally during fieldwork near Thule Air Base in September 2019. That year, there was extreme melt in North Greenland, which removed the seasonal snowpack as far as the eye. Anders Bjørk and I were working at the margin of Pingorsuit Glacier, when eagle-eyes Anders spotted some very dark, organic-rich, sediments. They were very understated tufts of peat, mostly covered in till, that were clearly being released from th ..read more
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Greenland Ice Sheet mass loss from combined CryoSat-2 and ICESat-2 altimetry
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
7M ago
We have a new open-access study out in the current volume of Journal of Geophysical Research that brings together both radar and laser altimetry measurements to assess the mass balance of the Greenland Ice Sheet between 2011 and 2020. Our assessment shows that the ice sheet lost approximately 498 Gt of ice volume, corresponding to approximately 7 mm of global sea-level equivalent during this time. The peak loss year was from April 2019 to April 2020, when the ice sheet lost 1.4 mm of global sea-level equivalent, which is equivalent to losing 15,850 tonnes of ice per second for an entire year ..read more
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Greenland Bedrock Uplift and Iceberg Discharge
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
7M ago
We have a new open-access study linking bedrock uplift and iceberg discharge at three major Greenland outlet glaciers in the last issue of Geophysical Research Letters. We look at recent changes in observed uplift rates and ice discharges at Jakobshavn, Kangerlussuaq and Helheim Glaciers. The idea of the study was to explore what we thought was a rather straightforward relation between uplift and discharge – uplift rates are relatively high when discharge rates are relatively high (and vice versa) – and see if there as any predictive power in this relation.   The uplift rates are observed ..read more
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Rainfall on the Greenland Ice Sheet
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
7M ago
We have a new open-access study in the current issue of Geophysical Research Letters that looks at rainfall over the Greenland Ice Sheet. In many places around the globe, rainfall is a big player in the water budget. But on the ice sheet, rainfall has traditionally been a small player in ice-sheet mass balance. In fact, virtually all of the automatic weathers stations deployed on the ice sheet today don’t even measure rainfall. These ice-sheet stations are instead optimized to measure accumulation from snowfall and ablation from melt. But, as major rainfall events are pushing higher and higher ..read more
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Instability of the North Water Polynya
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
7M ago
We have a new study in the current issue of Nature Communications. It looks at the stability of the North Open Water polynya over the past five millennia. The North Open Water – or ‘Pikialasorsuaq’ in Greenlandic – is a portion of northern Baffin Bay that is kept sea ice free year-round by atmospheric and oceanic currents. The North Open Water is one of the most biologically productive areas of the Arctic Ocean and has been described as a ‘regional supermarket’ because of the abundance and diversity of country foods that it supports. Figure 1 – The location of the North Open Water polynya and ..read more
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New View on Geothermal Heat Flow in Greenland and Antarctica
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
7M ago
We have a new open-access study about geothermal heat flow beneath the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface.  Presently, there’s a lot of uncertainty about the magnitude and pattern of geothermal heat flow beneath both ice sheets. That’s because it has only been sampled at a handful of widely spaced deep ice cores (Figure 1). While the average value of geothermal heat flow is relatively small, getting it right is essential for ice-flow models. If you run a computer simulation of an ice sheet with a severe over- or under-estimation of the ..read more
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28-Year Record of Greenland Ice Sheet Health
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
7M ago
We have a new open-access study about Greenland Ice Sheet mass balance – or health – in the current issue of Geophysical Research Letters. In this study, we present a new 28-year record of ice-sheet mass balance. This record is relatively unique for two reasons. Firstly, because of its length. The most recent ice-sheet mass balance inter-comparison exercise (IMBIE2) clearly highlighted how the availability of ice-sheet mass balance estimates has changed through time. During the GRACE satellite gravimetry era (2003-2017), there are usually more than twenty independent estimates of annual Greenl ..read more
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Freshwater Runoff from Greenland’s 54K Basins
Glacier Bytes Blog
by William Colgan
7M ago
We have a new open-access study out in the current issue of Earth Systems Science Data. In this study, we estimate the liquid water discharge – meaning meltwater and rainfall flowing into the ocean – every day since 1958 from 54,142 hydrologic basins across Greenland. About 40% of these basins are associated with glaciers or the ice sheet, and these “ice” basins accounted for ~65% of Greenland’s total liquid water discharge. On an annual basis, we estimate that Greenland’s liquid discharge varied from between ~136 km3 in 1992 and ~785 km3 in 2012. The daily discharge records and these individu ..read more
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