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Satellite archives reveal abrupt changes in behavior of Helheim Glacier, southeast Greenland

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2016

VICTORIA V. MILES*
Affiliation:
Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center, Bergen, Norway Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Bergen, Norway
MARTIN W. MILES
Affiliation:
Bjerknes Centre for Climate Research, Bergen, Norway Uni Research Climate, Bergen, Norway Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, USA
OLA M. JOHANNESSEN
Affiliation:
Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Center, Bergen, Norway Nansen Scientific Society, Bergen, Norway
*
Correspondence: Victoria V. Miles <victoria.miles@nersc.no>
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Abstract

Rapid changes in Helheim Glacier and other Greenland outlet glaciers since 2000 are well-known, but knowledge on earlier decades is fragmentary. Here we exploit the satellite image archives to produce and analyze a monthly-to-seasonal record of Helheim Glacier front position, 1980–2011. Statistical analysis identifies decadal periods with abrupt changes in variability and mean. The record also reveals evidence of volatile advance/retreat behavior in the 1980s. In one of several cases of large-amplitude subannual changes, the glacier front ‘surged’ forward in 1984/85, advancing ~6 km within a few months – surpassing its Little Ice Age maximum position – and afterward retreated ~5 km within a few weeks. These findings challenge the prevailing view of front position stability in the decades before the multi-year retreat in the early 2000s. Cold conditions including rigid ice mélange appear to be a factor in the high-amplitude seasonal advances in the 1980s. However the magnitude and abruptness of the changes in the record cannot be explained solely as a climatic response, such that glacio-dynamics must be invoked. Further, the volatile advance/retreat behavior in the cold 1980s resulted in increased dynamic ice loss, complicating the interpretation of increased calving activity as a response to warming.

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Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2016
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Location of Helheim Glacier (66.4°N, 38°W) and other outlet glaciers that terminate in Sermilik Fjord, southeast Greenland. The blue circle indicates the nearest meteorological station Tasiilaq. The orange circles indicate the sediment cores (Andresen and others, 2012; Andersen and others, 2014).

Figure 1

Table 1. Summary of the satellite imagery used in the study

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Helheim Glacier front position 1980–2011. Blue curve: annual (end-of-summer) values, updated from Johannessen and others (2011). Black curve: subannual values from this paper. Shading indicates three decadal periods of different variability: 1980–91, 1991–2001, and 2001–11; the dashed gray lines delimit sub-periods. Stable periods/sub-periods with stationary means are labeled S1 and S2. Large-amplitude variations are labeled: (1) multiyear advance, 1980–83; (2) ‘surge-like’ advance 1984/85 and retreat 1985/86; (3) enhanced seasonal advance/retreat oscillation, 1987–91; (R1) multiyear retreat, 2001–05; and (A1) re-advance, 2005–06. Front positions are relative to an arbitrary reference point (plotted in Fig. 5).

Figure 3

Fig. 3. Rapid advance and retreat of Helheim Glacier, 1984/85. Landsat image sequence: (a) 14 October 1984; (b) 30 March 1985; (c) 26 May 1985; (d) 11 June 1985; (e) 13 July 1985. The blue arrows in (b–d) show the advance from the front position in October 1984 (black curve). The red arrow in (e) shows the retreat from the farthest advance (dashed curve) in (d).

Figure 4

Fig. 4. Helheim Glacier front position (crosses), ice velocity (triangles) and ice mélange conditions (light blue = rigid, grey = mixed, and red = open) during the advance/retreat 1984/85 through 1986.

Figure 5

Fig. 5. Comparison of the rapid advance/retreat 1984/85 with the multi-year retreat in the early 2000s. Landsat image from September 1986, overlain with two sets of curves. The solid red curves show positions during the advance in 1984/85 and retreat in 1985/86, labeled in white text. The dotted red curves show the yearly position for Helheim during the retreat in the early 2000s, labeled in black text. The blue dotted curve is the Little Ice Age (LIA) maximum (Khan and others, 2014). The blue arrows indicate the mean position during the stable periods 1991–2001 (S1) and 2006 onwards (S2), as in Figure 2. For reference, the red triangle is the 0-point for the front position measurements plotted in Figure 2.

Figure 6

Fig. 6. Helheim Glacier calving front and comparison with climate data, 1980–2011: (a) Calving front position (black) and annual surface air temperature record (red) from the nearest station, Tasiilaq; (b) shelf index, an indicator of the relative amount of polar water and sea ice on the southeast Greenland shelf (from Andresen and others, 2012); (c) Ice mélange conditions in winter (light blue = rigid, grey = mixed and red = open), and (d) Annual area loss, an indicator of calving activity; horizontal bars are the mean annual calving losses in each decadal period. 1982 – no observations.