Modelling the contemporary liquid water balance of the Greenland Ice Sheet

The Greenland Ice sheet (GrIS) stores ∼7.4 m of global mean sea level equivalent in water, which poses a threat to low-lying areas in case of continuing deglaciation. Since the mid-1990s, the ice sheets’ mass balance (MB) has become negative, owing to enhanced solid ice discharge through marine-term...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Steger, C.R.
Other Authors: Sub Dynamics Meteorology, Marine and Atmospheric Research, van den Broeke, Michiel, Tijm - Reijmer, Carleen
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/364058
Description
Summary:The Greenland Ice sheet (GrIS) stores ∼7.4 m of global mean sea level equivalent in water, which poses a threat to low-lying areas in case of continuing deglaciation. Since the mid-1990s, the ice sheets’ mass balance (MB) has become negative, owing to enhanced solid ice discharge through marine-terminating outlet glaciers and increased surface melt and subsequent runoff. Runoff does thereby not simply equal surface melt due to potential retention of liquid water in the ice sheet’s hydrological systems. The porous firn layer, which covers ∼90% of the GrIS, acts as a prominent meltwater buffer via refreezing or liquid storage in firn aquifers. To investigate the magnitude of liquid water retention in the firn layer, we applied a detailed physical snow/firn model (SNOWPACK) to the glaciated area of Greenland. SNOWPACK simulates snow/firn compaction and considers vertical water percolation and related processes. The model explicitly simulates the evolution of microstructural snow properties and links them to thermal and mechanical quantities. SNOWPACK is run for the period 1960–2014 with atmospheric forcing data from the regional climate model RACMO2.3. An evaluation of the model with various in-situ measurements and remote sensing data confirms the model’s capability of reproducing the general characteristics of the contemporary GrIS firn layer, such as the spatial variability in vertical density profiles, the horizontal extent of firn aquifers and the interannual trend in Greenland’s MB. Averaged over the ice sheet and the period 1960–2014, ∼47% of the liquid water production/input at the surface is refrozen in the firn layer. This percentage exhibits a high spatial variability and is lowest for the northern ice sheet (∼30%) and highest in the southeast (∼75%), where porous firn depth is large owing to high snowfall rates. In terms of interannual variability, modelled components of the liquid water balance (melt, runoff, refreezing, rainfall and evaporation/condensation) are relatively constant between 1960 and ...