Abstract
Abstract. Seasonal meltwater pools on the surface of the Greenland
Ice Sheet (GrIS) during late spring and summer in lakes on the surface and
transforms the ice sheet's surface into a wet environment in the ablation
zone below the equilibrium line. These supraglacial lakes in topographic
lows on the ice surface are connected by a dendritic pattern of meandering
streams and channels that together form a hydrological system consisting of
supra-, en-, and subglacial components. Here, we use lidar data from NASA's
Airborne Topographic Mapper (ATM) instrument suite and high-resolution
optical imagery collected as part of Operation IceBridge (OIB) in spring
2019 over the GrIS to develop methods for the study of supraglacial
hydrological features. While airborne surveys have a limited temporal and
spatial coverage compared to imaging spaceborne sensors, their high
footprint density and high-resolution imagery reveal a level of detail that
is currently not obtainable from spaceborne measurements. The accuracy and
resolution of airborne measurements complement spaceborne measurements, can
support calibration and validation of spaceborne methods, and provide
information necessary for high-resolution process studies of the
supraglacial hydrological system on the GrIS that currently cannot be
achieved from spaceborne observations alone.
Funder
Aeronautics Research Mission Directorate
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
Cited by
3 articles.
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