Circum-Arctic changes in the flow of glaciers and ice caps from satellite SAR data between the 1990s and 2017

We computed circum-Arctic surface velocitymaps of glaciers and ice caps over the Canadian Arctic, Svalbard and the Russian Arctic for at least two times between the 1990s and 2017 using satellite SAR data. Our analyses are mainly performed with offset-tracking of ALOS-1 PALSAR-1 (2007–2011) and Sent...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Strozzi, Tazio, Paul, Frank, Wiesmann, Andreas, Schellenberger, Thomas, Kääb, Andreas
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: MDPI Publishing 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/142402/
https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/142402/1/2017_Strozzi_remotesensing-09-00947-v2.pdf
https://doi.org/10.5167/uzh-142402
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs9090947
Description
Summary:We computed circum-Arctic surface velocitymaps of glaciers and ice caps over the Canadian Arctic, Svalbard and the Russian Arctic for at least two times between the 1990s and 2017 using satellite SAR data. Our analyses are mainly performed with offset-tracking of ALOS-1 PALSAR-1 (2007–2011) and Sentinel-1 (2015–2017) data. In certain cases JERS-1 SAR (1994–1998), TerraSAR-X (2008–2012), Radarsat-2 (2009–2016) and ALOS-2 PALSAR-2 (2015–2016) data were used to fill-in spatial or temporal gaps. Validation of the latest Sentinel-1 results was accomplished by means of SAR data at higher spatial resolution (Radarsat-2Wide Ultra Fine) and ground-basedmeasurements. In general, we observe a deceleration of flow velocities for the major tidewater glaciers in the Canadian Arctic and an increase in frontal velocity along with a retreat of frontal positions over Svalbard and the Russian Arctic. However, all regions have strong accelerations for selected glaciers. The latter developments can be well traced based on the very high temporal sampling of Sentinel-1 acquisitions since 2015, revealing new insights in glacier dynamics. For example, surges on Spitsbergen (e.g., Negribreen, Nathorsbreen, Penckbreen and Strongbreen) have a different characteristic and timing than those over Eastern Austfonna and Edgeoya (e.g., Basin 3, Basin 2 and Stonebreen). Events similar to those ongoing on Eastern Austofonna were also observed over the Vavilov Ice Cap on Severnaya Zemlya and possibly Simony Glacier on Franz-Josef Land. Collectively, there seems to be a recently increasing number of glaciers with frontal destabilization over Eastern Svalbard and the Russian Arctic compared to the 1990s.