Accelerating Ice Loss From Peripheral Glaciers in North Greenland
Publication date
2022-06-28
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Abstract
In recent decades, Greenland's peripheral glaciers have experienced large-scale mass loss, resulting in a substantial contribution to sea level rise. While their total area of Greenland ice cover is relatively small (4%), their mass loss is disproportionally large compared to the Greenland ice sheet. Satellite altimetry from Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) and ICESat-2 shows that mass loss from Greenland's peripheral glaciers increased from 27.2 ± 6.2 Gt/yr (February 2003–October 2009) to 42.3 ± 6.2 Gt/yr (October 2018–December 2021). These relatively small glaciers now constitute 11 ± 2% of Greenland's ice loss and contribute to global sea level rise. In the period October 2018–December 2021, mass loss increased by a factor of four for peripheral glaciers in North Greenland. While peripheral glacier mass loss is widespread, we also observe a complex regional pattern where increases in precipitation at high altitudes have partially counteracted increases in melt at low altitude.
Keywords
Greenland, ice mass loss, Icesat-2, peripheral glacier, satellite altimetry, sea level rise, Geophysics, General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Citation
Khan, S A, Colgan, W, Neumann, T A, van den Broeke, M R, Brunt, K M, Noël, B, Bamber, J L, Hassan, J & Bjørk, A A 2022, 'Accelerating Ice Loss From Peripheral Glaciers in North Greenland', Geophysical Research Letters, vol. 49, no. 12, e2022GL098915, pp. 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1029/2022GL098915