The influence of hydrology on the dynamics of land-terminating sectors of the Greenland Ice Sheet

Coupling between runoff, hydrology, basal motion and mass loss (‘hydrology-dynamics’) is a critical component of the Greenland Ice Sheet system. Despite considerable research effort, the mechanisms by which runoff influences ice dynamics and the net long-term (decadal and longer) dynamical effect of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Frontiers in Earth Science
Main Authors: Davison, Ben, Sole, Andrew, Livingstone, Stephen, Cowton, Tom, Nienow, Peter
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/researchoutput/the-influence-of-hydrology-on-the-dynamics-of-landterminating-sectors-of-the-greenland-ice-sheet(1f679825-a690-418f-843b-c8378f8a7465).html
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2019.00010
https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/bitstream/10023/17121/1/Davison_2019_FES_Hydrology_CC.pdf
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Summary:Coupling between runoff, hydrology, basal motion and mass loss (‘hydrology-dynamics’) is a critical component of the Greenland Ice Sheet system. Despite considerable research effort, the mechanisms by which runoff influences ice dynamics and the net long-term (decadal and longer) dynamical effect of variations in the timing and magnitude of runoff delivery to the bed remain a subject of debate. We synthesise key research into land-terminating ice sheet hydrology-dynamics, in order to reconcile several apparent contradictions that have recently arisen as understanding of the topic has developed. We suggest that meltwater interaction with subglacial channels, cavities and deforming subglacial sediment modulates ice flow variability. Increasing surface runoff supply to the bed induces cavity expansion and sediment deformation, leading to early-melt season ice flow acceleration. In the ablation area, drainage of water at times of low runoff from high-pressure subglacial environments towards more efficient drainage pathways is thought to result in reductions in water pressure, ice-bed separation and sediment deformation, causing net slow-down on annual to decadal time-scales (ice flow self-regulation), despite increasing surface melt. Further inland, thicker ice, small surface gradients and reduced runoff supress efficient drainage development, and a small net increase in both summer and winter ice flow is observed. Predicting ice motion across land-terminating sectors of the ice sheet over the 21st century is confounded by inadequate understanding of the processes and feedbacks between runoff and subglacial motion. However, if runoff supply increases, we suggest that ice flow in marginal regions will continue to decrease on annual and longer timescales, principally due to (i) increasing drainage system efficiency in marginal areas, (ii) progressive depression of basal water pressure and (iii) thinning-induced lowering of driving stresses. At higher elevations, we suggest that minor year-on-year ice flow acceleration ...