Seasonal monitoring of melt and accumulation within the deep percolation zone of the Greenland Ice Sheet and comparison with simulations of regional climate modeling
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Published:2018-06-04
Issue:6
Volume:12
Page:1851-1866
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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:
Heilig AchimORCID, Eisen OlafORCID, MacFerrin MichaelORCID, Tedesco Marco, Fettweis XavierORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Increasing melt over the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) recorded
over the past several years has resulted in significant changes of the percolation
regime of the ice sheet. It remains unclear whether Greenland's percolation
zone will act as a meltwater buffer in the near future through gradually
filling all pore space or if near-surface refreezing causes the formation of
impermeable layers, which provoke lateral runoff. Homogeneous ice layers
within perennial firn, as well as near-surface ice layers of several meter
thickness have been observed in firn cores. Because firn coring is a
destructive method, deriving stratigraphic changes in firn and allocation of
summer melt events is challenging. To overcome this deficit and provide
continuous data for model evaluations on snow and firn density, temporal
changes in liquid water content and depths of water infiltration, we
installed an upward-looking radar system (upGPR) 3.4 m below the snow
surface in May 2016 close to Camp Raven
(66.4779∘ N, 46.2856∘ W) at 2120 m a.s.l. The radar is
capable of quasi-continuously monitoring changes in snow and firn
stratigraphy, which occur above the antennas. For summer 2016, we observed
four major melt events, which routed liquid water into various depths beneath
the surface. The last event in mid-August resulted in the deepest percolation
down to about 2.3 m beneath the surface. Comparisons with simulations from
the regional climate model MAR are in very good agreement in terms of
seasonal changes in accumulation and timing of onset of melt. However,
neither bulk density of near-surface layers nor the amounts of liquid water
and percolation depths predicted by MAR correspond with upGPR data. Radar
data and records of a nearby thermistor string, in contrast, matched very
well for both timing and depth of temperature changes and observed water
percolations. All four melt events transferred a cumulative mass of
56 kg m−2 into firn beneath the summer surface of 2015. We find that
continuous observations of liquid water content, percolation depths and rates
for the seasonal mass fluxes are sufficiently accurate to provide valuable
information for validation of model approaches and help to develop a better
understanding of liquid water retention and percolation in perennial firn.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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