Glacier flow instabilities can rapidly increase sea level through enhanced ice discharge. Surge-type glacier accelerations often occur with a decadal to centennial cyclicity suggesting internal mechanisms responsible. Recently, many surging tidewater glaciers around the Arctic Barents Sea region question whether external forces such as climate can trigger dynamic instabilities. Here, we identify a mechanism in which climate change can instigate surges of Arctic tidewater glaciers. Using satellite and seismic remote sensing observations combined with three-dimensional thermo-mechanical modeling of the January 2009 collapse of the Nathorst Glacier System (NGS) in Svalbard, we show that an underlying condition for instability was basal freezing and associated friction increase under the glacier tongue. In contrast, continued basal sliding further upstream increased driving stresses until eventual and sudden till failure under the tongue. The instability propagated rapidly up-glacier, mobilizing the entire 450 km glacier basin over a few days as the till entered an unstable friction regime. Enhanced mass loss during and after the collapse (5-7 fold compared to pre-collapse mass losses) combined with regionally rising equilibrium line altitudes strongly limit mass replenishment of the glacier, suggesting irreversible consequences. Climate plays a paradoxical role as cold glacier thinning and retreat promote basal freezing which increases friction at the tongue by stabilizing an efficient basal drainage system. However, with some of the most intense atmospheric warming on Earth occurring in the Arctic, increased melt water can reduce till strength under tidewater glacier tongues to orchestrate a temporal clustering of surges at decadal timescales, such as those observed in Svalbard at the end of the Little Ice Age. Consequently, basal terminus freezing promotes a dynamic vulnerability to climate change that may be present in many Arctic tidewater glaciers.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-41117-0 | DOI Listing |
HardwareX
April 2022
Arctic Research Centre, Department of Biology, Aarhus University, Ole Worms Allé 1, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark.
Accelerated melting of ice in Polar Regions due to global warming increases freshwater input to coastal waters from marine terminating glaciers. Lack of measurements near the glacier terminus limits our knowledge of the mixing processes between freshwater and the underlying ocean. We present a low-cost (< € 3200) and lightweight (2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Acoust Soc Am
January 2022
Institute of Low Temperature Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Hokkaido 060-0819, Japan.
Measurements of underwater sound are still scarce in the rapidly changing Arctic. Tele-seismically detectable glacial earthquakes caused by iceberg calving have been known for nearly two decades but their underwater sound levels remain undocumented. Here, we present near-source underwater sound records from a kilometer-scale iceberg calving associated with a glacial earthquake.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Res
April 2022
Division of Ocean Sciences, Korea Polar Research Institute, 26 Songdomirae-ro, Incheon, South Korea. Electronic address:
The concentration of n-alkanes (C-C) and sterols in marine particulate matter were investigated to trace the origin of organic carbon in Kongsfjorden in early spring (April). The spatial distributions of environmental factors (seawater temperature, salinity, density, turbidity, chlorophyll a (chl. a) and particulate organic carbon (POC) concentrations) and the cell density of phytoplankton differed between the inner and outer fjord regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2021
Norwegian Polar Institute, Fram Centre, Tromsø, 9296, Norway.
Nat Commun
June 2021
Arctic Research Center, Hokkaido University, Sapporo, Japan.
Shearing along subduction zones, laboratory experiments on analogue faults, and sliding along glacier beds are all associated with aseismic and co-seismic slip. In this study, an ocean-bottom seismometer is deployed near the terminus of a Greenlandic tidewater glacier, effectively insulating the signal from the extremely noisy surface seismic wavefield. Continuous, tide-modulated tremor related to ice speed is recorded at the bed of the glacier.
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