Sensitivity of a calving glacier to ice–ocean interactions under climate change: new insights from a 3-D full-Stokes model
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Published:2019-06-14
Issue:6
Volume:13
Page:1681-1694
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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:
Todd JoeORCID, Christoffersen PoulORCID, Zwinger ThomasORCID, Råback Peter, Benn Douglas I.
Abstract
Abstract. Iceberg calving accounts for between 30 % and 60 % of net mass loss from
the Greenland Ice Sheet, which has intensified and is now the single largest
contributor to global sea level rise in the cryosphere. Changes to calving
rates and the dynamics of calving glaciers represent a significant
uncertainty in projections of future sea level rise. A growing body of
observational evidence suggests that calving glaciers respond rapidly to
regional environmental change, but predictive capacity is limited by the lack
of suitable models capable of simulating calving mechanisms realistically.
Here, we use a 3-D full-Stokes calving model to investigate the environmental
sensitivity of Store Glacier, a large outlet glacier in West Greenland. We
focus on two environmental processes: undercutting by submarine melting and
buttressing by ice mélange, and our results indicate that Store Glacier
is likely to be able to withstand moderate warming perturbations in which the
former is increased by 50 % and the latter reduced by 50 %. However,
severe perturbation with a doubling of submarine melt rates or a complete
loss of ice mélange destabilises the calving front in our model runs.
Furthermore, our analysis reveals that stress and fracture patterns at
Store's terminus are complex and varied, primarily due to the influence of
basal topography. Calving style and environmental sensitivity vary greatly,
with propagation of surface crevasses significantly influencing iceberg
production in the northern side, whereas basal crevasses dominate in the
south. Any future retreat is likely to be initiated in the southern side by a
combination of increased submarine melt rates in summer and reduced
mélange strength in winter. The lateral variability, as well as the
importance of rotational and bending forces at the terminus, underlines the
importance of using the 3-D full-Stokes stress solution when modelling
Greenland's calving glaciers.
Funder
Natural Environment Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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