Fjord dynamics and glacio-marine interactions on Northern Ellesmere Island, Canada
Abstract
Despite the existence of ice shelves and glacier tongues along the northern coast of Ellesmere Island, Canada, for the majority of the past 4000 years (Evans and England, 1992; Antoniades et al., 2011) recent atmospheric warming has contributed to collapse of the remaining ice shelves and the loss of rare ice-shelf dammed lakes (epishelf lakes) (Mueller et al., 2003, 2008; Copland et al., 2007). These studies have primarily addressed surface processes as the causal factors for ice shelf breakup, but changes in ocean stratification and heat flux, meltwater input, and subglacial thermodynamics may strongly influence the integrity and fate of these systems. Despite the growing evidence of the importance of oceanic processes on tidewater glacier mass balance in Greenlandic fjords (Holland et al., 2008; Johnson et al., 2011; Straneo et al., 2011) these processes remain poorly studied on related systems in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago (CAA). In addition, the recent sharp increase in mass loss from the glaciers and ice caps of the CAA, primarily in the form of meltwater runoff (Gardner et al., 2011) suggest understanding the aquatic and oceanic factors contributing to ice shelf and glacier tongue integrity and epishelf lake formation is critical. We will present observations from the Milne Fjord ice shelf, epishelf lake, and glacier tongue system on the northern coast of Ellesmere Island, Canada (Fig. 1). Two years of field observations include a 15-month under-ice ocean mooring deployment, through-ice oceanographic CTD and current velocity profiles, and ice mass balance estimates from ablation stake and GPR surveys. We will present the first ever observations of the seasonal and episodic oceanographic variations of Milne Fjord, with particular focus on ocean-epishelf lake-ice shelf dynamics. We aim to understand how all ice and ocean components interact to determine the evolution and stability of the system, with the goal of understanding and perhaps predicting large ice calving events and epishelf lake drainage. Figure 1. Elevation schematic of Milne Fjord, Ellesmere Island showing the ice shelf-dammed freshwater lake overlying deeper saltwater between the floating ice shelf and glacier tongue. Processes shown include a hypothesized estuarine-like fjord circulation, supra- and sub-glacial runoff, basal ice melting, tides, and sub-ice shelf freshwater outflow.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2012
- Bibcode:
- 2012AGUFM.C43D0650H
- Keywords:
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- 0720 CRYOSPHERE / Glaciers;
- 0728 CRYOSPHERE / Ice shelves;
- 4207 OCEANOGRAPHY: GENERAL / Arctic and Antarctic oceanography;
- 4599 OCEANOGRAPHY: PHYSICAL / General or miscellaneous