Efficient meltwater drainage through supraglacial streams and rivers on the southwest Greenland ice sheet.
Laurence C. Smith,V. W. Chu,Kang Yang,Colin J. Gleason,Lincoln H. Pitcher,Asa K. Rennermalm,Carl J. Legleiter,A. Behar,Brandon T. Overstreet,S. Moustafa,Marco Tedesco,Richard R. Forster,A. L. LeWinter,David C. Finnegan,Yongwei Sheng,James Balog +15 more
TL;DR: Satellite and in situ technologies assess surface drainage conditions on the southwestern ablation surface after an extreme 2012 melting event conclude that the ice sheet surface is efficiently drained under optimal conditions, that digital elevation models alone cannot fully describe supraglacial drainage and its connection to subglacial systems, and that predicting outflow from climate models alone, without recognition of sub glacial processes, may overestimate true meltwater release from theIce sheet.
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Abstract: Thermally incised meltwater channels that flow each summer across melt-prone surfaces of the Greenland ice sheet have received little direct study. We use high-resolution WorldView-1/2 satellite mapping and in situ measurements to characterize supraglacial water storage, drainage pattern, and discharge across 6,812 km(2) of southwest Greenland in July 2012, after a record melt event. Efficient surface drainage was routed through 523 high-order stream/river channel networks, all of which terminated in moulins before reaching the ice edge. Low surface water storage (3.6 ± 0.9 cm), negligible impoundment by supraglacial lakes or topographic depressions, and high discharge to moulins (2.54-2.81 cm⋅d(-1)) indicate that the surface drainage system conveyed its own storage volume every <2 d to the bed. Moulin discharges mapped inside ∼52% of the source ice watershed for Isortoq, a major proglacial river, totaled ∼41-98% of observed proglacial discharge, highlighting the importance of supraglacial river drainage to true outflow from the ice edge. However, Isortoq discharges tended lower than runoff simulations from the Modele Atmospherique Regional (MAR) regional climate model (0.056-0.112 km(3)⋅d(-1) vs. ∼0.103 km(3)⋅d(-1)), and when integrated over the melt season, totaled just 37-75% of MAR, suggesting nontrivial subglacial water storage even in this melt-prone region of the ice sheet. We conclude that (i) the interior surface of the ice sheet can be efficiently drained under optimal conditions, (ii) that digital elevation models alone cannot fully describe supraglacial drainage and its connection to subglacial systems, and (iii) that predicting outflow from climate models alone, without recognition of subglacial processes, may overestimate true meltwater export from the ice sheet to the ocean.
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Citations
Response of supraglacial rivers and lakes to ice flow and surface melt on the northeast Greenland ice sheet during the 2017 melt season
TL;DR: In this article, the authors mapped the multi-temporal supraglacial rivers and lakes on the northeast Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) using sixty-five 10m Sentinel-2 multispectral satellite images acquired during the 2017 summer, and quantified their primary hydromorphology, including meltwater area fraction, meltwater volume, river length, river depth, lake shape, and lake depth.
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Controls on Greenland moulin geometry and evolution from the Moulin Shape model
Kristin Poinar,Celia Trunz +1 more
TL;DR: The Moulin Shape (MouSh) model as mentioned in this paper is a time-evolving model of moulin geometry that models the deformation of moulins using both viscous and elastic rheologies.
Pigment signatures of algal communities and their implications for glacier surface darkening
Laura Halbach,Lou-Anne Chevrollier,Eva L. Doting,Joseph M. Cook,Marie B. Jensen,Liane G. Benning,James Bradley,Martin Hansen,Lars Chr. Lund-Hansen,Stiig Markager,Brian K. Sorrell,Martyn Tranter,Christopher B. Trivedi,Matthias Winkel,Alexandre M. Anesio +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the impacts of algal pigment and community composition on surface darkening were investigated on three glaciers in Southeast Greenland, showing that algal biomass and pigments impacted chromophoric dissolved organic matter concentrations.
Greenland liquid water runoff from 1979 through 2017
Kenneth D. Mankoff,Andreas P. Ahlstrøm,William Colgan,Robert S. Fausto,Xavier Fettweis,Ken Kondo,Kirsty Langley,Brice Noël,Shin Sugiyama,Dirk van As +9 more
TL;DR: Mankoff et al. as discussed by the authors provided high-resolution datasets of Greenland hydrologic outlets, basins, and streams, and a 1979 through 2017 time series of Greenland liquid water runoff for each outlet.
Hourly surface meltwater routing for a Greenlandic supraglacial catchment across hillslopes and through a dense topological channel network
Colin J. Gleason,Kang Yang,Dongmei Feng,Laurence C. Smith,Kai Liu,L. H. Pitcher,Vena W Chu,Matthew G. Cooper,Brandon T. Overstreet,Asa K. Rennermalm,Jonathan C. Ryan +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors constrain surface mass balance (SMB) models using the hillslope river routing model (HRR), a spatially explicit flow routing model used in terrestrial hydrology, in a 63 km 2 supraglacial river catchment in southwest Greenland.
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