Greenland Ice Shelves and Ice Tongues

Niels Reeh

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    This chapter focuses on a review of the glaciers on north and northeast
    Greenland that terminate in fiords with long glacier tongues and floating, ice-shelf-like margins. There is some debate as to whether these glacier tongues can be classified as a traditional ice shelf, so the relevant literature and physical properties are reviewed. There exists a difference between: (1) Floating glaciers in northern Greenland (>77°N) which experience bottom melting as their dominant ablation mechanism and calve relatively thin, but large (km-sized) tabular icebergs (‘ice islands’), and (2) Grounded glaciers further south (<77°N), where iceberg calving provides the dominant ablation mechanism. The relatively smaller iceberg discharge in northern Greenland is closely related to the occurrence of extended floating glacier sections, allowing bottom melting estimated at up to 10 m year−1 for locations such as Petermann Glacier. A case study is described of the physical characteristics and historical changes of Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden Glacier, NE Greenland, based on field and remote sensing studies.
    Original languageEnglish
    Title of host publicationArctic Ice Shelves and Ice Islands
    Number of pages32
    PublisherSpringer
    Publication date2017
    Pages75-106
    Chapter4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 2017
    SeriesSpringer Polar Sciences
    ISSN2510-0475

    Keywords

    • Greenland
    • Ice tounge
    • Ice shelf
    • Outlet glacier
    • Sea ice
    • Icebergs
    • Ice Iceland

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