the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Extreme melting at Greenland's largest floating ice tongue
Niklas Neckel
Nils Dörr
Veit Helm
Daniel Steinhage
Ralph Timmermann
Angelika Humbert
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We construct a mathematical model to describe the formation of lakes on the Greenland Ice Sheet across multiple years. The model represents the dynamics of ice, snow, and surface water, accounting for the influence of air temperature. Our results indicate that lakes can enhance ice melt by absorbing sunlight, thereby accelerating the loss of Greenland ice under realistic scenarios of temperature increase.
Quantifying melt and freeze beneath Antarctica’s floating ice shelves is vital to understanding present-day ice-sheet behavior and its potential to contribute to future sea-level rise. We compare 10 ice-shelf/ocean computer simulations with satellite data, providing the first multi-model estimate of melting and refreezing driven by the ocean. This new estimate offers a valuable tool for assessing ice-shelf roles in current and future ice-sheet changes, informing coastal adaptation strategies.
oldest icecore at nearby Little Dome C. These data allow us to identify 50 % older internal horizons than previously traced in the area. We fit a model to the ages of those horizons at BELDC to determine the age of deep ice there. We find that there is likely to be 1.5 Myr old ice ~265 m above the bed, with sufficient resolution to preserve desired climatic information.