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Ice front change of marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northwest and southeast Greenland during the 21st Century

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Ice front change of marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northwest and southeast Greenland during the 21st Century. / Bunce, Charlie; Carr, J. Rachel; Nienow, Peter et al.
In: Journal of Glaciology, Vol. 64, No. 246, 08.2018, p. 523-535.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Bunce C, Carr JR, Nienow P, Ross N, Killick RC. Ice front change of marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northwest and southeast Greenland during the 21st Century. Journal of Glaciology. 2018 Aug;64(246):523-535. Epub 2018 May 22. doi: 10.1017/jog.2018.44

Author

Bunce, Charlie ; Carr, J. Rachel ; Nienow, Peter et al. / Ice front change of marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northwest and southeast Greenland during the 21st Century. In: Journal of Glaciology. 2018 ; Vol. 64, No. 246. pp. 523-535.

Bibtex

@article{7bf4af4adf3945fba308f43332957283,
title = "Ice front change of marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northwest and southeast Greenland during the 21st Century",
abstract = "The increasingly negative mass balance of the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS) over the last ~25 years has been associated with enhanced surface melt and increased ice loss from marine-terminating outlet glaciers. Accelerated retreat during 2000–2010 was concentrated in the southeast and northwest sectors of the ice sheet; however, there was considerable spatial and temporal variability in the timing and magnitude of retreat both within and between these regions. This behaviour has yet to be quantified and compared for all glaciers in both regions. Furthermore, it is unclear whether retreat has continued after 2010 in the northwest, and whether the documented slowdown in the southeast post-2005 has been sustained. Here, we compare spatial and temporal patterns of frontal change in the northwest and southeast GrIS, for the period 2000–2015. Our results show near-ubiquitous retreat of outlet glaciers across both regions for the study period; however, the timing and magnitude of inter-annual frontal position change is largely asynchronous. We also find that since 2010, there is continued terminus retreat in the northwest, which contrasts with considerable inter-annual variability in the southeast. Analysis of the role of glacier-specific factors demonstrates that fjord and bed geometry are important controls on the timing and magnitude of glacier retreat.",
keywords = "arctic glaciology, glacier fluctuations, glacier mapping, remote sensing",
author = "Charlie Bunce and Carr, {J. Rachel} and Peter Nienow and Neil Ross and Killick, {Rebecca Claire}",
year = "2018",
month = aug,
doi = "10.1017/jog.2018.44",
language = "English",
volume = "64",
pages = "523--535",
journal = "Journal of Glaciology",
issn = "0022-1430",
publisher = "International Glaciology Society",
number = "246",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ice front change of marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northwest and southeast Greenland during the 21st Century

AU - Bunce, Charlie

AU - Carr, J. Rachel

AU - Nienow, Peter

AU - Ross, Neil

AU - Killick, Rebecca Claire

PY - 2018/8

Y1 - 2018/8

N2 - The increasingly negative mass balance of the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS) over the last ~25 years has been associated with enhanced surface melt and increased ice loss from marine-terminating outlet glaciers. Accelerated retreat during 2000–2010 was concentrated in the southeast and northwest sectors of the ice sheet; however, there was considerable spatial and temporal variability in the timing and magnitude of retreat both within and between these regions. This behaviour has yet to be quantified and compared for all glaciers in both regions. Furthermore, it is unclear whether retreat has continued after 2010 in the northwest, and whether the documented slowdown in the southeast post-2005 has been sustained. Here, we compare spatial and temporal patterns of frontal change in the northwest and southeast GrIS, for the period 2000–2015. Our results show near-ubiquitous retreat of outlet glaciers across both regions for the study period; however, the timing and magnitude of inter-annual frontal position change is largely asynchronous. We also find that since 2010, there is continued terminus retreat in the northwest, which contrasts with considerable inter-annual variability in the southeast. Analysis of the role of glacier-specific factors demonstrates that fjord and bed geometry are important controls on the timing and magnitude of glacier retreat.

AB - The increasingly negative mass balance of the Greenland ice sheet (GrIS) over the last ~25 years has been associated with enhanced surface melt and increased ice loss from marine-terminating outlet glaciers. Accelerated retreat during 2000–2010 was concentrated in the southeast and northwest sectors of the ice sheet; however, there was considerable spatial and temporal variability in the timing and magnitude of retreat both within and between these regions. This behaviour has yet to be quantified and compared for all glaciers in both regions. Furthermore, it is unclear whether retreat has continued after 2010 in the northwest, and whether the documented slowdown in the southeast post-2005 has been sustained. Here, we compare spatial and temporal patterns of frontal change in the northwest and southeast GrIS, for the period 2000–2015. Our results show near-ubiquitous retreat of outlet glaciers across both regions for the study period; however, the timing and magnitude of inter-annual frontal position change is largely asynchronous. We also find that since 2010, there is continued terminus retreat in the northwest, which contrasts with considerable inter-annual variability in the southeast. Analysis of the role of glacier-specific factors demonstrates that fjord and bed geometry are important controls on the timing and magnitude of glacier retreat.

KW - arctic glaciology

KW - glacier fluctuations

KW - glacier mapping

KW - remote sensing

U2 - 10.1017/jog.2018.44

DO - 10.1017/jog.2018.44

M3 - Journal article

VL - 64

SP - 523

EP - 535

JO - Journal of Glaciology

JF - Journal of Glaciology

SN - 0022-1430

IS - 246

ER -