(www.interscience.wiley.com) DOI:10.1002/hyp.7343 Hydrologic drainage of the Greenland Ice Sheet

A simple hydrologic drainage network for the Greenland Ice Sheet is modelled from available digital elevation models (DEMs) of bedrock, and surface topography and assumptions of hydrostatic water pressure, uniform hydraulic conductivity, and no conduit flow within the ice sheet. As such, it is a fir...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sarah M. Lewis, Laurence C. Smith
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.546.2252
http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/geog/downloads/297/356.pdf
Description
Summary:A simple hydrologic drainage network for the Greenland Ice Sheet is modelled from available digital elevation models (DEMs) of bedrock, and surface topography and assumptions of hydrostatic water pressure, uniform hydraulic conductivity, and no conduit flow within the ice sheet. As such, it is a first-order model best suited for broad-scale hydrological assessment. Results identify 293 distinct hydrologic basins (185–117 000 km2) together with their ‘realized ’ (wet) and ‘unrealized’ (dry) drainage patterns. Intersection with 1991–2000 Polar MM5 (PMM5) mesoscale climate model hindcasts of meltwater runoff suggest that these basins route varying amounts of water to the ice edge, ranging from 0 to 16 km3 annually and totalling 242 km3/year for the entire ice sheet. Regionally speaking, average annual volumetric meltwater production (km3/year) is highest in southwest and lowest in northeast Greenland, with greater hydrologic activity in western regions than in eastern regions for a given latitude. The extent to which meltwater truly reaches the ice margin as modelled is difficult to test. However, the simulated flow outlet locations show qualitative agreement with the locations of 460 observed meltwater outlets (proglacial lakes, streams, and rivers; and sediment plumes into fjörds) mapped continuously along the ice sheet perimeter. On average, about 36 % of the modelled drainage network was activated (i.e. received water) over the 1991–2000 study period. Remaining areas, barring dynamic changes to ice-surface topography, would presumably