Journey of an Arctic ice island

In August 2010, a 253 km2 ice island calved from the floating glacial tongue of Petermann Glacier in Northwest Greenland. Petermann Ice Island (PII)-B, a large fragment of this original ice island, is the most intensively observed ice island in recent decades. We chronicle PII-B’s deterioration over...

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Published in:Oceanography
Main Authors: Crawford, Anna J., Wadhams, Peter, Wagner, Till, Stern, Alon, Abrahamsen, Paul, Bates, C. Richard, Church, Ian, Nicholls, Kieth
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/publications/74749c06-be1a-4ac5-849e-6baf96db0ff1
https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.30
https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/bitstream/10023/9184/1/Crawford_2016_Oceano_Journey_FinalPublishedVersion.pdf
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spelling ftunstandrewcris:oai:research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk:publications/74749c06-be1a-4ac5-849e-6baf96db0ff1 2024-11-03T14:51:39+00:00 Journey of an Arctic ice island Crawford, Anna J. Wadhams, Peter Wagner, Till Stern, Alon Abrahamsen, Paul Bates, C. Richard Church, Ian Nicholls, Kieth 2016-06-27 application/pdf https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/publications/74749c06-be1a-4ac5-849e-6baf96db0ff1 https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.30 https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/bitstream/10023/9184/1/Crawford_2016_Oceano_Journey_FinalPublishedVersion.pdf eng eng info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Crawford , A J , Wadhams , P , Wagner , T , Stern , A , Abrahamsen , P , Bates , C R , Church , I & Nicholls , K 2016 , ' Journey of an Arctic ice island ' , Oceanography , vol. 29 , no. 2 , pp. 254-263 . https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.30 article 2016 ftunstandrewcris https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.30 2024-10-09T23:40:50Z In August 2010, a 253 km2 ice island calved from the floating glacial tongue of Petermann Glacier in Northwest Greenland. Petermann Ice Island (PII)-B, a large fragment of this original ice island, is the most intensively observed ice island in recent decades. We chronicle PII-B’s deterioration over four years while it drifted more than 2,400 km south along Canada’s eastern Arctic coast, investigate the ice island’s interactions with surrounding ocean waters, and report on its substantial seafloor scour. Three-dimensional sidewall scans of PII-B taken while it was grounded 130 km southeast of Clyde River, Nunavut, show that prolonged wave erosion at the waterline during sea ice-free conditions created a large underwater protrusion. The resulting buoyancy forces caused a 100 m × 1 km calving event, which was recorded by two GPS units. A field team observed surface waters to be warmer and fresher on the side of PII-B where the calving occurred, which perhaps led to the accelerated growth of the protrusion. PII-B produced up to 3.8 gigatonnes (3.8 × 1012 kg) of ice fragments, known hazards to the shipping and resource extraction industries, monitored over 22 months. Ice island seafloor scour, such as a 850 m long, 3 m deep trench at PII-B’s grounding location, also puts subseafloor installations (e.g., pipelines) at risk. This long-term and interdisciplinary assessment of PII-B is the first such study in the eastern Canadian Arctic and captures the multiple implications and risks that ice islands impose on the natural environment and offshore industries. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Clyde River glacier Greenland Nunavut Petermann glacier Sea ice University of St Andrews: Research Portal Arctic Clyde River ENVELOPE(-70.451,-70.451,69.854,69.854) Greenland Nunavut Oceanography 29 2
institution Open Polar
collection University of St Andrews: Research Portal
op_collection_id ftunstandrewcris
language English
description In August 2010, a 253 km2 ice island calved from the floating glacial tongue of Petermann Glacier in Northwest Greenland. Petermann Ice Island (PII)-B, a large fragment of this original ice island, is the most intensively observed ice island in recent decades. We chronicle PII-B’s deterioration over four years while it drifted more than 2,400 km south along Canada’s eastern Arctic coast, investigate the ice island’s interactions with surrounding ocean waters, and report on its substantial seafloor scour. Three-dimensional sidewall scans of PII-B taken while it was grounded 130 km southeast of Clyde River, Nunavut, show that prolonged wave erosion at the waterline during sea ice-free conditions created a large underwater protrusion. The resulting buoyancy forces caused a 100 m × 1 km calving event, which was recorded by two GPS units. A field team observed surface waters to be warmer and fresher on the side of PII-B where the calving occurred, which perhaps led to the accelerated growth of the protrusion. PII-B produced up to 3.8 gigatonnes (3.8 × 1012 kg) of ice fragments, known hazards to the shipping and resource extraction industries, monitored over 22 months. Ice island seafloor scour, such as a 850 m long, 3 m deep trench at PII-B’s grounding location, also puts subseafloor installations (e.g., pipelines) at risk. This long-term and interdisciplinary assessment of PII-B is the first such study in the eastern Canadian Arctic and captures the multiple implications and risks that ice islands impose on the natural environment and offshore industries.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Crawford, Anna J.
Wadhams, Peter
Wagner, Till
Stern, Alon
Abrahamsen, Paul
Bates, C. Richard
Church, Ian
Nicholls, Kieth
spellingShingle Crawford, Anna J.
Wadhams, Peter
Wagner, Till
Stern, Alon
Abrahamsen, Paul
Bates, C. Richard
Church, Ian
Nicholls, Kieth
Journey of an Arctic ice island
author_facet Crawford, Anna J.
Wadhams, Peter
Wagner, Till
Stern, Alon
Abrahamsen, Paul
Bates, C. Richard
Church, Ian
Nicholls, Kieth
author_sort Crawford, Anna J.
title Journey of an Arctic ice island
title_short Journey of an Arctic ice island
title_full Journey of an Arctic ice island
title_fullStr Journey of an Arctic ice island
title_full_unstemmed Journey of an Arctic ice island
title_sort journey of an arctic ice island
publishDate 2016
url https://research-portal.st-andrews.ac.uk/en/publications/74749c06-be1a-4ac5-849e-6baf96db0ff1
https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.30
https://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/bitstream/10023/9184/1/Crawford_2016_Oceano_Journey_FinalPublishedVersion.pdf
long_lat ENVELOPE(-70.451,-70.451,69.854,69.854)
geographic Arctic
Clyde River
Greenland
Nunavut
geographic_facet Arctic
Clyde River
Greenland
Nunavut
genre Arctic
Arctic
Clyde River
glacier
Greenland
Nunavut
Petermann glacier
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
Clyde River
glacier
Greenland
Nunavut
Petermann glacier
Sea ice
op_source Crawford , A J , Wadhams , P , Wagner , T , Stern , A , Abrahamsen , P , Bates , C R , Church , I & Nicholls , K 2016 , ' Journey of an Arctic ice island ' , Oceanography , vol. 29 , no. 2 , pp. 254-263 . https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.30
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5670/oceanog.2016.30
container_title Oceanography
container_volume 29
container_issue 2
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