Quantifying flow regimes in a Greenland glacial fjord using iceberg drifters
Quantifying flow regimes in a Greenland glacial fjord using iceberg drifters
Date
2014-12-11
Authors
Sutherland, David A.
Roth, George E.
Hamilton, Gordon S.
Mernild, Sebastian H.
Stearns, Leigh A.
Straneo, Fiamma
Roth, George E.
Hamilton, Gordon S.
Mernild, Sebastian H.
Stearns, Leigh A.
Straneo, Fiamma
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DOI
10.1002/2014GL062256
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Keywords
Icebergs
Fjord circulation
Ice mélange
East Greenland Current
Greenland ice sheet
Iceberg melt
Fjord circulation
Ice mélange
East Greenland Current
Greenland ice sheet
Iceberg melt
Abstract
Large, deep-keeled icebergs are ubiquitous in Greenland's outlet glacial fjords. Here we use the movement of these icebergs to quantify flow variability in Sermilik Fjord, southeast Greenland, from the ice mélange through the fjord to the shelf. In the ice mélange, a proglacial mixture of sea ice and icebergs, we find that icebergs consistently track the glacier speed, with slightly faster speeds near terminus and episodic increases due to calving events. In the fjord, icebergs accurately capture synoptic circulation driven by both along-fjord and along-shelf winds. Recirculation and in-/out-fjord variations occur throughout the fjord more frequently than previously reported, suggesting that across-fjord velocity gradients cannot be ignored. Once on the shelf, icebergs move southeastward in the East Greenland Coastal Current, providing wintertime observations of this freshwater pathway.
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Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geophysical Research Letters 41 (2014): 8411–8420, doi:10.1002/2014GL062256.
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Geophysical Research Letters 41 (2014): 8411–8420