Velocity response of Petermann Glacier, northwest Greenland to past and future calving events

Dynamic ice discharge from outlet glaciers across the Greenland Ice Sheet has increased since the beginning of the 21st century. Calving from floating ice tongues that buttress these outlets can accelerate ice flow and discharge of grounded ice. However, little is known about the dynamic impact of i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hill EA, Gudmundsson GH, Carr JR, Stokes CR
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Copernicus Publications
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=252744/B6D76412-D533-47C0-84A8-A2EC526E4DEC.pdf&pub_id=252744
id ftunivnewcastle:oai:eprint.ncl.ac.uk:252744
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivnewcastle:oai:eprint.ncl.ac.uk:252744 2023-05-15T13:44:27+02:00 Velocity response of Petermann Glacier, northwest Greenland to past and future calving events Hill EA Gudmundsson GH Carr JR Stokes CR application/pdf https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=252744/B6D76412-D533-47C0-84A8-A2EC526E4DEC.pdf&pub_id=252744 unknown Copernicus Publications The Cryosphere Article ftunivnewcastle 2020-06-11T23:44:33Z Dynamic ice discharge from outlet glaciers across the Greenland Ice Sheet has increased since the beginning of the 21st century. Calving from floating ice tongues that buttress these outlets can accelerate ice flow and discharge of grounded ice. However, little is known about the dynamic impact of ice tongue loss in Greenland compared to ice shelf collapse in Antarctica. The rapidly flowing (~1000 m a -1 ) Petermann Glacier in northwest Greenland has one of the ice sheet's last remaining ice tongues, but it lost ~50%–60% (~40km in length) of this tongue via two large calving events in 2010 and 2012. The glacier showed a limited velocity response to these calving events, but it is unclear how sensitive it is to future ice tongue loss. Here, we use an ice flow model (Úa) to assess the instantaneous velocity response of Petermann Glacier to past and future calving events. Our results confirm that the glacier was dynamically insensitive to large calving events in 2010 and 2012 (<10% annual acceleration). We then simulate the future loss of similarly sized sections to the 2012 calving event (~8km long) of the ice tongue back to the grounding line. We conclude that thin, soft sections of the ice tongue >12km away from the grounding line provide little frontal buttressing, and removing them is unlikely to significantly increase ice velocity or discharge. However, once calving removes ice within 12km of the grounding line, loss of these thicker and stiffer sections of ice tongue could perturb stresses at the grounding line enough to substantially increase inland flow speeds (~900 m a -1 ), grounded ice discharge, and Petermann Glacier's contribution to global sea level rise. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica glacier Greenland Ice Sheet Ice Shelf Petermann glacier The Cryosphere Newcastle University Library ePrints Service Buttress ENVELOPE(-57.083,-57.083,-63.550,-63.550) Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection Newcastle University Library ePrints Service
op_collection_id ftunivnewcastle
language unknown
description Dynamic ice discharge from outlet glaciers across the Greenland Ice Sheet has increased since the beginning of the 21st century. Calving from floating ice tongues that buttress these outlets can accelerate ice flow and discharge of grounded ice. However, little is known about the dynamic impact of ice tongue loss in Greenland compared to ice shelf collapse in Antarctica. The rapidly flowing (~1000 m a -1 ) Petermann Glacier in northwest Greenland has one of the ice sheet's last remaining ice tongues, but it lost ~50%–60% (~40km in length) of this tongue via two large calving events in 2010 and 2012. The glacier showed a limited velocity response to these calving events, but it is unclear how sensitive it is to future ice tongue loss. Here, we use an ice flow model (Úa) to assess the instantaneous velocity response of Petermann Glacier to past and future calving events. Our results confirm that the glacier was dynamically insensitive to large calving events in 2010 and 2012 (<10% annual acceleration). We then simulate the future loss of similarly sized sections to the 2012 calving event (~8km long) of the ice tongue back to the grounding line. We conclude that thin, soft sections of the ice tongue >12km away from the grounding line provide little frontal buttressing, and removing them is unlikely to significantly increase ice velocity or discharge. However, once calving removes ice within 12km of the grounding line, loss of these thicker and stiffer sections of ice tongue could perturb stresses at the grounding line enough to substantially increase inland flow speeds (~900 m a -1 ), grounded ice discharge, and Petermann Glacier's contribution to global sea level rise.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Hill EA
Gudmundsson GH
Carr JR
Stokes CR
spellingShingle Hill EA
Gudmundsson GH
Carr JR
Stokes CR
Velocity response of Petermann Glacier, northwest Greenland to past and future calving events
author_facet Hill EA
Gudmundsson GH
Carr JR
Stokes CR
author_sort Hill EA
title Velocity response of Petermann Glacier, northwest Greenland to past and future calving events
title_short Velocity response of Petermann Glacier, northwest Greenland to past and future calving events
title_full Velocity response of Petermann Glacier, northwest Greenland to past and future calving events
title_fullStr Velocity response of Petermann Glacier, northwest Greenland to past and future calving events
title_full_unstemmed Velocity response of Petermann Glacier, northwest Greenland to past and future calving events
title_sort velocity response of petermann glacier, northwest greenland to past and future calving events
publisher Copernicus Publications
url https://eprint.ncl.ac.uk/fulltext.aspx?url=252744/B6D76412-D533-47C0-84A8-A2EC526E4DEC.pdf&pub_id=252744
long_lat ENVELOPE(-57.083,-57.083,-63.550,-63.550)
geographic Buttress
Greenland
geographic_facet Buttress
Greenland
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
glacier
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Petermann glacier
The Cryosphere
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
glacier
Greenland
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelf
Petermann glacier
The Cryosphere
op_source The Cryosphere
_version_ 1766201730094071808