Rapid ice discharge from southeast Greenland glaciers
Issue Date
2004-03-25Author
Rignot, E.
Braaten, David A.
Gogineni, Sivaprasad
Krabill, William B.
McConnell, Joesph R.
Publisher
Wiley
Type
Article
Article Version
Scholarly/refereed, publisher version
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
[1] Interferometric synthetic-aperture radar (InSAR) observations of southeast Greenland glaciers acquired by the Earth Remote Sensing Satellites (ERS-1/2) in 1996 were combined with ice sounding radar data collected in the late 1990s to estimate a total discharge of 46 ± 3 km3 ice per year between 62°N and 66°N, which is significantly lower than a mass input of 29 ± 3 km3 ice per year calculated from a recent compilation of snow accumulation data. Further north, Helheim Glacier discharges 23 ± 1 km3/yr vs 30 ± 3 km3/yr accumulation; Kangerdlugssuaq Glacier discharges 29 ± 2 km3/yr vs 23 ± 2 km3/yr; and Daugaard-Jensen Glacier discharges 10.5 ± 0.6 km3/yr vs 10.5 ± 1 km3/yr. The mass balance of east Greenland glaciers is therefore dominated by the negative mass balance of southeast Greenland glaciers (−17 ± 4 km3/yr), equivalent to a sea level rise of 0.04 ± 0.01 mm/yr. Warmer and drier conditions cannot explain the imbalance which we attribute to long-term changes in ice dynamics.
Description
This is the published version, also available here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2004GL019474.
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Citation
Rignot, E., D. Braaten, S. P. Gogineni, W. B. Krabill, and J. R. McConnell (2004), Rapid ice discharge from southeast Greenland glaciers, Geophys. Res. Lett., 31, L10401, http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2004GL019474.
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