Ongoing grounding line retreat and fracturing initiated at the Petermann Glacier ice shelf, Greenland, after 2016
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Published:2022-08-08
Issue:7
Volume:16
Page:3021-3031
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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:
Millan Romain, Mouginot JeremieORCID, Derkacheva AnnaORCID, Rignot EricORCID, Milillo PietroORCID, Ciraci EnricoORCID, Dini Luigi, Bjørk AndersORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The Petermann ice shelf is one of the largest in Greenland,
buttressing 4 % of the total ice sheet discharge, and is considered
dynamically stable. In this study, we use differential synthetic aperture
radar interferometry to reconstruct the grounding line migration between
1992 and 2021. Over the last 30 years, we find that the grounding line
of Petermann retreated 4 km in the western and eastern sectors and 7 km in
the central part. The majority of the retreat in the central sector took
place between 2017 and 2021, where the glacier receded more than 5 km along
a retrograde bed grounded 500 m below sea level. While the central sector
stabilized on a sill, the eastern flank is sitting on top of a down-sloping
bed, which might enhance the glacier retreat in the coming years. This
grounding line retreat followed a speedup of the glacier by 15 % in the
period 2015–2018. Along with the glacier acceleration, two large fractures
formed along flow in 2015, splitting the ice shelf in three sections, with
a partially decoupled flow regime. While these series of events followed the
warming of the ocean waters by 0.3 ∘C in Nares Strait, the use of a
simple grounding line model suggests that enhanced submarine melting may
have been responsible for the recent grounding line migration of Petermann
Glacier.
Funder
Agence Nationale de la Recherche
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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