Variable glacier response to atmospheric warming, northern Antarctic Peninsula, 1988-2009

The northern Antarctic Peninsula has recently exhibited ice-shelf disintegration, glacier recession and acceleration. However, the dynamic response of land-terminating, ice-shelf tributary and tidewater glaciers has not yet been quantified or assessed for variability, and there are sparse data for g...

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Main Authors: B.J. Davies, J.L. Carrivick, N.F. Glasser, M.J. Hambrey, John L. Smellie
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Variable_glacier_response_to_atmospheric_warming_northern_Antarctic_Peninsula_1988-2009/10176254
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spelling ftleicesterunfig:oai:figshare.com:article/10176254 2023-05-15T14:03:49+02:00 Variable glacier response to atmospheric warming, northern Antarctic Peninsula, 1988-2009 B.J. Davies J.L. Carrivick N.F. Glasser M.J. Hambrey John L. Smellie 2012-01-01T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Variable_glacier_response_to_atmospheric_warming_northern_Antarctic_Peninsula_1988-2009/10176254 unknown 2381/28443 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Variable_glacier_response_to_atmospheric_warming_northern_Antarctic_Peninsula_1988-2009/10176254 All Rights Reserved Uncategorized IR content Text Journal contribution 2012 ftleicesterunfig 2021-11-11T20:01:49Z The northern Antarctic Peninsula has recently exhibited ice-shelf disintegration, glacier recession and acceleration. However, the dynamic response of land-terminating, ice-shelf tributary and tidewater glaciers has not yet been quantified or assessed for variability, and there are sparse data for glacier classification, morphology, area, length or altitude. This paper firstly classifies the area, length, altitude, slope, aspect, geomorphology, type and hypsometry of 194 glaciers on Trinity Peninsula, Vega Island and James Ross Island in 2009 AD. Secondly, this paper documents glacier change 1988-2009. In 2009, the glacierised area was 8140±262 km2. From 1988-2001, 90% of glaciers receded, and from 2001-2009, 79% receded. This equates to an area change of -4.4% for Trinity Peninsula eastern coast glaciers, -0.6% for western coast glaciers, and -35.0% for ice-shelf tributary glaciers from 1988-2001. Tidewater glaciers on the drier, cooler eastern Trinity Peninsula experienced fastest shrinkage from 1988-2001, with limited frontal change after 2001. Glaciers on the western Trinity Peninsula shrank less than those on the east. Land-terminating glaciers on James Ross Island shrank fastest in the period 1988-2001. This east-west difference is largely a result of orographic temperature and precipitation gradients across the Antarctic Peninsula, with warming temperatures affecting the precipitation-starved glaciers on the eastern coast more than on the western coast. Reduced shrinkage on the western Peninsula may be a result of higher snowfall, perhaps in conjunction with the fact that these glaciers are mostly grounded. Rates of area loss on the eastern side of Trinity Peninsula are slowing, which we attribute to the floating ice tongues receding into the fjords and reaching a new dynamic equilibrium. The rapid shrinkage of tidewater glaciers on James Ross Island is likely to continue because of their low elevations and flat profiles. In contrast, the higher and steeper tidewater glaciers on the eastern Antarctic ... Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Ice Shelf James Ross Island Ross Island Tidewater Vega Island University of Leicester: Figshare Antarctic The Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Ross Island Trinity Peninsula ENVELOPE(-58.000,-58.000,-63.500,-63.500) Vega Island ENVELOPE(-57.500,-57.500,-63.833,-63.833)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Leicester: Figshare
op_collection_id ftleicesterunfig
language unknown
topic Uncategorized
IR content
spellingShingle Uncategorized
IR content
B.J. Davies
J.L. Carrivick
N.F. Glasser
M.J. Hambrey
John L. Smellie
Variable glacier response to atmospheric warming, northern Antarctic Peninsula, 1988-2009
topic_facet Uncategorized
IR content
description The northern Antarctic Peninsula has recently exhibited ice-shelf disintegration, glacier recession and acceleration. However, the dynamic response of land-terminating, ice-shelf tributary and tidewater glaciers has not yet been quantified or assessed for variability, and there are sparse data for glacier classification, morphology, area, length or altitude. This paper firstly classifies the area, length, altitude, slope, aspect, geomorphology, type and hypsometry of 194 glaciers on Trinity Peninsula, Vega Island and James Ross Island in 2009 AD. Secondly, this paper documents glacier change 1988-2009. In 2009, the glacierised area was 8140±262 km2. From 1988-2001, 90% of glaciers receded, and from 2001-2009, 79% receded. This equates to an area change of -4.4% for Trinity Peninsula eastern coast glaciers, -0.6% for western coast glaciers, and -35.0% for ice-shelf tributary glaciers from 1988-2001. Tidewater glaciers on the drier, cooler eastern Trinity Peninsula experienced fastest shrinkage from 1988-2001, with limited frontal change after 2001. Glaciers on the western Trinity Peninsula shrank less than those on the east. Land-terminating glaciers on James Ross Island shrank fastest in the period 1988-2001. This east-west difference is largely a result of orographic temperature and precipitation gradients across the Antarctic Peninsula, with warming temperatures affecting the precipitation-starved glaciers on the eastern coast more than on the western coast. Reduced shrinkage on the western Peninsula may be a result of higher snowfall, perhaps in conjunction with the fact that these glaciers are mostly grounded. Rates of area loss on the eastern side of Trinity Peninsula are slowing, which we attribute to the floating ice tongues receding into the fjords and reaching a new dynamic equilibrium. The rapid shrinkage of tidewater glaciers on James Ross Island is likely to continue because of their low elevations and flat profiles. In contrast, the higher and steeper tidewater glaciers on the eastern Antarctic ...
format Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
author B.J. Davies
J.L. Carrivick
N.F. Glasser
M.J. Hambrey
John L. Smellie
author_facet B.J. Davies
J.L. Carrivick
N.F. Glasser
M.J. Hambrey
John L. Smellie
author_sort B.J. Davies
title Variable glacier response to atmospheric warming, northern Antarctic Peninsula, 1988-2009
title_short Variable glacier response to atmospheric warming, northern Antarctic Peninsula, 1988-2009
title_full Variable glacier response to atmospheric warming, northern Antarctic Peninsula, 1988-2009
title_fullStr Variable glacier response to atmospheric warming, northern Antarctic Peninsula, 1988-2009
title_full_unstemmed Variable glacier response to atmospheric warming, northern Antarctic Peninsula, 1988-2009
title_sort variable glacier response to atmospheric warming, northern antarctic peninsula, 1988-2009
publishDate 2012
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Variable_glacier_response_to_atmospheric_warming_northern_Antarctic_Peninsula_1988-2009/10176254
long_lat ENVELOPE(-58.000,-58.000,-63.500,-63.500)
ENVELOPE(-57.500,-57.500,-63.833,-63.833)
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ross Island
Trinity Peninsula
Vega Island
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ross Island
Trinity Peninsula
Vega Island
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ice Shelf
James Ross Island
Ross Island
Tidewater
Vega Island
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ice Shelf
James Ross Island
Ross Island
Tidewater
Vega Island
op_relation 2381/28443
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Variable_glacier_response_to_atmospheric_warming_northern_Antarctic_Peninsula_1988-2009/10176254
op_rights All Rights Reserved
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