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Firn aquifer water discharges into crevasses across Southeast Greenland

  • SUNY Buffalo
  • University of Maryland, College Park
  • NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
  • University of California at San Diego
  • Tufts University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

In Southeast Greenland, summer melt and high winter snowfall rates give rise to firn aquifers: vast stores of meltwater buried beneath the ice-sheet surface. Previous detailed studies of a single Greenland firn aquifer site suggest that the water drains into crevasses, but this is not known at a regional scale. We develop and use a tool in Ghub, an online gateway of shared datasets, tools and supercomputing resources for glaciology, to identify crevasses from elevation data collected by NASA's Airborne Topographic Mapper across 29000 km2 of Southeast Greenland. We find crevasses within 3 km of the previously mapped downglacier boundary of the firn aquifer at 20 of 25 flightline crossings. Our data suggest that crevasses widen until they reach the downglacier boundary of the firn aquifer, implying that crevasses collect firn-aquifer water, but we did not find this trend with statistical significance. The median crevasse width, 27 meters, implies an aspect ratio consistent with the crevasses reaching the bed. Our results support the idea that most water in Southeast Greenland firn aquifers drains through crevasses. Less common fates are discharge at the ice-sheet surface (3 of 25 sites) and refreezing at the aquifer bottom (1 of 25 sites).

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Glaciology
Volume40
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - May 17 2023

Keywords

  • Crevasses
  • glacier hydrology
  • melt - surface
  • polar firn
  • surface mass budget

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