Summary: | Kangerlussuaq Glacier, a dominant contributor to mass loss in central-eastern Greenland, has primarily been studied using remote sensing methods, whose mass balance over the last century and specific drivers of change remain poorly understood. We introduce a novel approach that combines numerical modeling and a 1933-2021 climate forcing to reconstruct its mass balance over the past century. The model's final state aligns remarkably well with present-day observations. It reveals a total ice mass loss of 285 Gt over the century, equivalent to 0.68 mm global sea level rise, $51\%$ of which occurred since 2003 over the last 20 years alone. Notably, dynamic thinning from ice front retreat is responsible for $88\%$ of mass change since 1933, with seasonal ice front variations having minimal impact on centennial mass loss. Compared to earlier studies, our findings suggest that Kangerlussuaq lost 301 Gt (59\%) less mass over the century than previously thought. This data-set contains the model output from the centennial model presented in the paper. The spatial data is gridded on 500x500 m polar stereographic grid (epsg:3413). The time series are given per model time step.
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