Improved monitoring of subglacial lake activity in Greenland

Subglacial lakes may form beneath ice sheets and ice caps, given the availability of water and appropriate bedrock and surface topography to capture the water. On a regional scale, these lakes can modulate the freshwater output to the ocean by acting as reservoirs that may periodically drain and rec...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bahbah Nielsen, Rasmus, Sandberg Sørensen, Louise, Bjerregaard Simonsen, Sebastian, Havelund Andersen, Natalia, Munck Solgaard, Anne, Bjørnholt Karlsson, Nanna, Bowling, Jade, Leeson, Amber, McMillian, Malcom, Gourmelen, Noel, Horton, Alex, Wessel, Birgit
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/148249/
Description
Summary:Subglacial lakes may form beneath ice sheets and ice caps, given the availability of water and appropriate bedrock and surface topography to capture the water. On a regional scale, these lakes can modulate the freshwater output to the ocean by acting as reservoirs that may periodically drain and recharge. Several such active subglacial lakes have been documented under the Antarctic ice sheet, while only a few are observed under the Greenland ice sheet. The small size of the hydrologically active subglacial lakes in Greenland compared to those in Antarctica, puts additional demands on our mapping capabilities to resolve in great detail the evolving surface topography over these lakes to document their temporal behavior. Here, we explore the potential of combining CryoSat-2 swath data and high resolution DEMs generated from TanDEM-X scenes and ArcticDEM strips to improve our knowledge of the evolution of four active subglacial lake sites previously documented in the literature. We find that the DEM data complement each other well in terms of time and resolution and thus provide new information about the subglacial lake activity, though the small size of the collapse basins is challenging for CS2, and we are only able to derive useful CS2 data for the two largest of the four investigated lakes. Based on these data sets we can e.g. conclude that the collapse basin at Flade Isblink was actually as deep as 95 m when it formed, which is 30 m deeper than previously documented. We also present evidence of a new active subglacial lake in Southwest Greenland.