The 32-year record-high surface melt in 2019/2020 on the northern George VI Ice Shelf, Antarctic Peninsula
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Published:2021-02-25
Issue:2
Volume:15
Page:909-925
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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:
Banwell Alison F.ORCID, Datta Rajashree Tri, Dell Rebecca L.ORCID, Moussavi Mahsa, Brucker LudovicORCID, Picard GhislainORCID, Shuman Christopher A.ORCID, Stevens Laura A.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. In the 2019/2020 austral summer, the surface melt duration and
extent on the northern George VI Ice Shelf (GVIIS) was exceptional compared
to the 31 previous summers of distinctly lower melt. This finding is based
on analysis of near-continuous 41-year satellite microwave radiometer and
scatterometer data, which are sensitive to meltwater on the ice shelf
surface and in the near-surface snow. Using optical satellite imagery from
Landsat 8 (2013 to 2020) and Sentinel-2 (2017 to 2020), record volumes of
surface meltwater ponding were also observed on the northern GVIIS in
2019/2020, with 23 % of the surface area covered by 0.62 km3 of ponded meltwater on 19 January. These exceptional melt and
surface ponding conditions in 2019/2020 were driven by sustained air
temperatures ≥0 ∘C for anomalously long periods (55 to 90 h)
from late November onwards, which limited meltwater refreezing.
The sustained warm periods were likely driven by warm, low-speed (≤7.5 m s−1) northwesterly and northeasterly winds and not by foehn wind
conditions, which were only present for 9 h total in the 2019/2020 melt
season. Increased surface ponding on ice shelves may threaten their
stability through increased potential for hydrofracture initiation; a risk
that may increase due to firn air content depletion in response to
near-surface melting.
Funder
National Science Foundation British Antarctic Survey European Space Agency
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
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