Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Surface elevation changes during 2007–13 on Bowdoin and Tugto Glaciers, northwestern Greenland
View through CrossRef
ABSTRACTTo quantify recent thinning of marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northwestern Greenland, we carried out field and satellite observations near the terminus of Bowdoin Glacier. These data were used to compute the change in surface elevation from 2007 to 2013 and this rate of thinning was then compared with that of the adjacent land-terminating Tugto Glacier. Comparing DEMs of 2007 and 2010 shows that Bowdoin Glacier is thinning more rapidly (4.1 ± 0.3 m a−1) than Tugto Glacier (2.8 ± 0.3 m a−1). The observed negative surface mass-balance accounts for <40% of the elevation change of Bowdoin Glacier, meaning that the thinning of Bowdoin Glacier cannot be attributable to surface melting alone. The ice speed of Bowdoin Glacier increases down-glacier, reaching 457 m a−1 near the calving front. This flow regime causes longitudinal stretching and vertical compression at a rate of −0.04 a−1. It is likely that this dynamically-controlled thinning has been enhanced by the acceleration of the glacier since 2000. Our measurements indicate that ice dynamics indeed play a predominant role in the rapid thinning of Bowdoin Glacier.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Surface elevation changes during 2007–13 on Bowdoin and Tugto Glaciers, northwestern Greenland
Description:
ABSTRACTTo quantify recent thinning of marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northwestern Greenland, we carried out field and satellite observations near the terminus of Bowdoin Glacier.
These data were used to compute the change in surface elevation from 2007 to 2013 and this rate of thinning was then compared with that of the adjacent land-terminating Tugto Glacier.
Comparing DEMs of 2007 and 2010 shows that Bowdoin Glacier is thinning more rapidly (4.
1 ± 0.
3 m a−1) than Tugto Glacier (2.
8 ± 0.
3 m a−1).
The observed negative surface mass-balance accounts for <40% of the elevation change of Bowdoin Glacier, meaning that the thinning of Bowdoin Glacier cannot be attributable to surface melting alone.
The ice speed of Bowdoin Glacier increases down-glacier, reaching 457 m a−1 near the calving front.
This flow regime causes longitudinal stretching and vertical compression at a rate of −0.
04 a−1.
It is likely that this dynamically-controlled thinning has been enhanced by the acceleration of the glacier since 2000.
Our measurements indicate that ice dynamics indeed play a predominant role in the rapid thinning of Bowdoin Glacier.
Related Results
Inventory and kinematics of rock glaciers in Goikarla Rigyu, Tibetan Plateau
Inventory and kinematics of rock glaciers in Goikarla Rigyu, Tibetan Plateau
Rock glaciers are periglacial landforms often observed above the timberline in alpine mountains. Their activity states can indicate the existence of permafrost. To help further exp...
Preliminary landslide mapping in Greenland
Preliminary landslide mapping in Greenland
The landslide of 17 June 2017 in Karrat Fjord, central West Greenland, highlighted the need for a better understanding of landslides and landslide-generated tsunamis in Greenland a...
Bed geometry controls timing and magnitude of sea-level rise from Greenland's outlet glaciers
Bed geometry controls timing and magnitude of sea-level rise from Greenland's outlet glaciers
The projected contribution to sea-level rise from the Greenland Ice
Sheet currently has a large spread in literature, ranging from about 14
to 255 mm by the year 2100. Part of this...
Moisture sources for Greenland ice core sites: Seasonality and land/ocean contributions
Moisture sources for Greenland ice core sites: Seasonality and land/ocean contributions
<div>
<div>The interpretation of the climate ice core isotope signal relies on the knowledge on the underlying moisture transport and variability hereof...
Marine‐terminating glaciers sustain high productivity in Greenland fjords
Marine‐terminating glaciers sustain high productivity in Greenland fjords
AbstractAccelerated mass loss from the Greenland ice sheet leads to glacier retreat and an increasing input of glacial meltwater to the fjords and coastal waters around Greenland. ...
The First Rock Glacier Inventory for the Greater Caucasus
The First Rock Glacier Inventory for the Greater Caucasus
Rock glaciers are an integral part of the periglacial environment. At the regional scale in the Greater Caucasus, there have been no comprehensive systematic efforts to assess the ...
Quantifying Basal Melt of Swiss Glaciers
Quantifying Basal Melt of Swiss Glaciers
Glaciers retreating due to climate change have significant impacts both locally and globally. An essential part of understanding their evolution are mass balance measurements. Alth...
Categorisation of the length of bowhead whales from British Arctic whaling records
Categorisation of the length of bowhead whales from British Arctic whaling records
British whalers were the first and last from Europe to hunt bowhead whales (Balaena mysticetus) commercially from the Arctic whaling grounds of the Greenland Sea (East Greenland-Sv...

