Spatiotemporal evolution of subaerial ice cliff heights at marine-terminating outlet glaciers in Northwestern Greenland

crossref(2024)

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摘要
Many tidewater glaciers in Greenland terminate in near-vertical ice cliffs from which icebergs calve. Marine Ice Cliff Instability (MICI) is the hypothesis that above a subaerial ice cliff height limit, the tensile or shear stresses at the glacier terminus surpass the ice yield strength, causing catastrophic cliff failure and self-sustaining ice frontal retreat as sequentially taller subaerial cliffs are exposed. Previous modelling studies have proposed this threshold subaerial cliff height is at least 100 m, with estimated thresholds including 100 m and 110 m for damaged ice, and up to 540 m when ice is treated as undamaged. However, modern-day observations to test MICI are limited because few marine-terminating outlet glaciers without a buttressing ice shelf are known to terminate in subaerial ice cliffs greater than 100 m high. Here, we expand the observations of subaerial ice cliff heights at ten marine-terminating outlet glaciers in northwest Greenland using 2 m spatial resolution Arctic DEM strips. Our results identify three marine-terminating outlet glaciers that currently terminate in exposed subaerial ice cliffs approaching or exceeding the stability thresholds estimated for MICI. During at least two years between 2016 and 2021, subaerial ice cliffs at Nuussuup Sermia (NuS), Nunnatakassaap Sermia (NkS) and Sermeq North (SqN) exceeded heights of 100 m and 110 m. Despite being above these postulated thresholds thought conducive for cliff failure, SqN underwent relatively limited net retreat (0.25 km), and NuS and NkS exhibited distinct seasonal cycles of terminus advance (up to 0.92 km) from March to June/July each year prior to the disintegration and removal of proglacial ice mélange. Consequently, none of the glaciers identified as potentially susceptible to MICI underwent rapid, unforced retreat. We hypothesise that MICI processes were mitigated by dynamic thinning lowering the ice surface elevation immediately up-glacier of the ice cliff so that progressively taller subaerial cliffs were not exposed after retreat. Further research is required to monitor and model the evolution of subaerial ice cliffs to better understand the potential for unstable retreat in West Antarctica due to MICI.
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