Greenland ice sheet

Publication date

2013

Authors

Tedesco, M.
Alexander, P.
Box, J.E.
Cappelen, J.
Mote, T.
Steffen, K.
van de Wal, R. S.W.ISNI 0000000388217396
Wahr, J.
Wouters, B.ISNI 0000000080129605

Editors

Blunden, Jessica
Arndt, Derek S.

Advisors

Supervisors

DOI

Document Type

Part of book
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License

Abstract

Forty marine-terminating glaciers have been surveyed daily since 2000 using cloud-free MODIS visible imagery (Box and Decker 2011; http://bprc. osu.edu/MODIS/). The net area change of the 40 glaciers during the period of observation has been -1775 km2, with the 18 northernmost (>72°N) glaciers alone contributing to half of the net area change. In 2012, the northernmost glaciers lost a collective area of 255 km2, or 86% of the total net area change of the 40 glaciers surveyed. The six glaciers with the largest net area loss in 2012 were Petermann (-141 km2), 79 glacier (-27 km2), Zachariae (-26 km2), Steenstrup (-19 km2), Steensby (-16 km2, the greatest retreat since observations began), and Jakobshavn (-13 km2). While the total area change was negative in 2012, the area of four of the forty glaciers did increase relative to the end of the 2011 melt season. The anomalous advance of these four glaciers is not easily explained, as the mechanisms controlling the behavior of individual glaciers are uncertain due to their often unique geographic!settings.

Keywords

SDG 14 - Life Below Water

Citation

Tedesco, M, Alexander, P, Box, J E, Cappelen, J, Mote, T, Steffen, K, van de Wal, R S W, Wahr, J & Wouters, B 2013, Greenland ice sheet. in J Blunden & D S Arndt (eds), State of the climate in 2012. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society , no. 8, vol. 94, American Meteorological Society, pp. S121-S123.