RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry

In 2012, multiple lines of evidence suggest a record release of freshwater from the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS), the largest expanse of glacial ice in the Northern Hemisphere and a major source of meltwater and associated material to the surrounding North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans. Between July 8 an...

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Main Author: NSF Arctic Data Center
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Arctic Data Center 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DG7C
id dataone:doi:10.18739/A2DG7C
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:doi:10.18739/A2DG7C 2024-06-03T18:46:42+00:00 RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry NSF Arctic Data Center NORTH AMERICA > GREENLAND ENVELOPE(-50.16,-50.16,67.06,67.06) BEGINDATE: 2012-09-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2014-06-30T00:00:00Z 2014-10-24T00:00:00Z https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DG7C unknown Arctic Data Center EARTH SCIENCE > SOLID EARTH > GEOCHEMISTRY > GEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES > ISOTOPES EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > GLACIERS MANNED FIELD STATION environment Dataset 2014 dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DG7C 2024-06-03T18:08:13Z In 2012, multiple lines of evidence suggest a record release of freshwater from the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS), the largest expanse of glacial ice in the Northern Hemisphere and a major source of meltwater and associated material to the surrounding North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans. Between July 8 and 12, satellite-derived estimates of surface melt increased from 40% to 97% of the ice sheet. This warming received widespread media attention and public interest, yet the scientific community lacks direct observations of meltwater controls on ice sheet movement and meltwater geochemistry for such a large-scale melting event. The overarching goal of this RAPID proposal is to quantify, in short order, the impact of a large-scale melting event on the ice sheet dynamics and meltwater biogeochemistry of a large, land-terminating glacier on the western Greenland margin. RAPID funds will enable the analysis and synthesis of a unique sample set collected during other fieldwork from the Leverett Glacier catchment, a large outlet glacier that discharges through a single proglacial river. Though the focus is on the 2012 episode, the investigators will also analyze samples and GrIS dynamics data from two field seasons (2011- 12), which will aid in interpretation of changes driven by the historic melting event owing to the highly contrasting annual freshwater discharge rates. The investigators will use time-series radiogenic (beryllium-7 and radon-222) and stable isotopes (oxygen and hydrogen), each with unique sources and constant production rates, from the Leverett glacier watershed to differentiate the fractions of meltwater sourced from recent surface snow, glacial ice and delayed flow meltwater. They will also investigate the composition and magnitude of nutrient and metal fluxes released from the subglacial environment and study how these fluxes evolved during July 2012. From 2011-12, parallel ice sheet geophysical data (GPS, satellite imagery) and meltwater biogeochemistry samples (carbon, macro- and micro-nutrients) have been collected by the PI and colleagues from universities in the United Kingdom. The proposed project will fully fund a Ph.D. student, and high school students and undergraduate interns will be recruited to assist with the laboratory aspect of the research. In order to increase the visibility of this project among the general public, the PI and student will co-author an article for the WHOI magazine Oceanus. This publication reaches a wide audience through both print- and web-based editions. Finally, the Ph.D. student will continue to report on the results of this study via an Expedition Blog called "Following the Ice" on Scientific American (http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/expeditions/tag/following-the-ice/). The radon dataset is complete and available for download immediately. The beryllium-7 and water isotope data will be uploaded by August 2015. Dataset Arctic glacier Greenland Ice Sheet Leverett Glacier North Atlantic RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry Arctic Data Center (via DataONE) Arctic Greenland Leverett Glacier ENVELOPE(-147.583,-147.583,-85.633,-85.633) ENVELOPE(-50.16,-50.16,67.06,67.06)
institution Open Polar
collection Arctic Data Center (via DataONE)
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:ARCTIC
language unknown
topic EARTH SCIENCE > SOLID EARTH > GEOCHEMISTRY > GEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES > ISOTOPES
EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > GLACIERS
MANNED FIELD STATION
environment
spellingShingle EARTH SCIENCE > SOLID EARTH > GEOCHEMISTRY > GEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES > ISOTOPES
EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > GLACIERS
MANNED FIELD STATION
environment
NSF Arctic Data Center
RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry
topic_facet EARTH SCIENCE > SOLID EARTH > GEOCHEMISTRY > GEOCHEMICAL PROPERTIES > ISOTOPES
EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > GLACIERS
MANNED FIELD STATION
environment
description In 2012, multiple lines of evidence suggest a record release of freshwater from the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS), the largest expanse of glacial ice in the Northern Hemisphere and a major source of meltwater and associated material to the surrounding North Atlantic and Arctic Oceans. Between July 8 and 12, satellite-derived estimates of surface melt increased from 40% to 97% of the ice sheet. This warming received widespread media attention and public interest, yet the scientific community lacks direct observations of meltwater controls on ice sheet movement and meltwater geochemistry for such a large-scale melting event. The overarching goal of this RAPID proposal is to quantify, in short order, the impact of a large-scale melting event on the ice sheet dynamics and meltwater biogeochemistry of a large, land-terminating glacier on the western Greenland margin. RAPID funds will enable the analysis and synthesis of a unique sample set collected during other fieldwork from the Leverett Glacier catchment, a large outlet glacier that discharges through a single proglacial river. Though the focus is on the 2012 episode, the investigators will also analyze samples and GrIS dynamics data from two field seasons (2011- 12), which will aid in interpretation of changes driven by the historic melting event owing to the highly contrasting annual freshwater discharge rates. The investigators will use time-series radiogenic (beryllium-7 and radon-222) and stable isotopes (oxygen and hydrogen), each with unique sources and constant production rates, from the Leverett glacier watershed to differentiate the fractions of meltwater sourced from recent surface snow, glacial ice and delayed flow meltwater. They will also investigate the composition and magnitude of nutrient and metal fluxes released from the subglacial environment and study how these fluxes evolved during July 2012. From 2011-12, parallel ice sheet geophysical data (GPS, satellite imagery) and meltwater biogeochemistry samples (carbon, macro- and micro-nutrients) have been collected by the PI and colleagues from universities in the United Kingdom. The proposed project will fully fund a Ph.D. student, and high school students and undergraduate interns will be recruited to assist with the laboratory aspect of the research. In order to increase the visibility of this project among the general public, the PI and student will co-author an article for the WHOI magazine Oceanus. This publication reaches a wide audience through both print- and web-based editions. Finally, the Ph.D. student will continue to report on the results of this study via an Expedition Blog called "Following the Ice" on Scientific American (http://blogs.scientificamerican.com/expeditions/tag/following-the-ice/). The radon dataset is complete and available for download immediately. The beryllium-7 and water isotope data will be uploaded by August 2015.
format Dataset
author NSF Arctic Data Center
author_facet NSF Arctic Data Center
author_sort NSF Arctic Data Center
title RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry
title_short RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry
title_full RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry
title_fullStr RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry
title_full_unstemmed RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry
title_sort rapid: impact of large scale greenland ice sheet melting on glacier hydrology and meltwater geochemistry
publisher Arctic Data Center
publishDate 2014
url https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DG7C
op_coverage NORTH AMERICA > GREENLAND
ENVELOPE(-50.16,-50.16,67.06,67.06)
BEGINDATE: 2012-09-01T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2014-06-30T00:00:00Z
long_lat ENVELOPE(-147.583,-147.583,-85.633,-85.633)
ENVELOPE(-50.16,-50.16,67.06,67.06)
geographic Arctic
Greenland
Leverett Glacier
geographic_facet Arctic
Greenland
Leverett Glacier
genre Arctic
glacier
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Leverett Glacier
North Atlantic
RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry
genre_facet Arctic
glacier
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Leverett Glacier
North Atlantic
RAPID: Impact of Large Scale Greenland Ice Sheet Melting on Glacier Hydrology and Meltwater Geochemistry
op_doi https://doi.org/10.18739/A2DG7C
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