Generation and fate of basal meltwater during winter, western Greenland Ice Sheet
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Published:2021-12-07
Issue:12
Volume:15
Page:5409-5421
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ISSN:1994-0424
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Container-title:The Cryosphere
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language:en
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Short-container-title:The Cryosphere
Author:
Harper Joel, Meierbachtol TobyORCID, Humphrey Neil, Saito Jun, Stansberry Aidan
Abstract
Abstract. Basal sliding in the ablation zone of the Greenland Ice Sheet is
closely associated with water from surface melt introduced to the bed in
summer, yet melting of basal ice also generates subglacial water year-round.
Assessments of basal melt rely on modeling with results strongly dependent
upon assumptions with poor observational constraints. Here we use surface and
borehole measurements to investigate the generation and fate of basal
meltwater in the ablation zone of Isunnguata Sermia basin, western
Greenland. The observational data are used to constrain estimates of the
heat and water balances, providing insights into subglacial hydrology during
the winter months when surface melt is minimal or nonexistent. Despite
relatively slow ice flow speeds during winter, the basal meltwater
generation from sliding friction remains manyfold greater than that due to
geothermal heat flux. A steady acceleration of ice flow over the winter
period at our borehole sites can cause the rate of basal water generation to
increase by up to 20 %. Borehole measurements show high but steady basal
water pressure rather than monotonically increasing pressure. Ice and
groundwater sinks for water do not likely have sufficient capacity to
accommodate the meltwater generated in winter. Analysis of basal cavity
dynamics suggests that cavity opening associated with flow acceleration
likely accommodates only a portion of the basal meltwater, implying that a
residual is routed to the terminus through a poorly connected drainage
system. A forcing from cavity expansion at high pressure may explain
observations of winter acceleration in western Greenland.
Funder
National Science Foundation Svensk Kärnbränslehantering
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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