Annals of Glaciology ()

Characteristics of the 15-year surge of Mittie Glacier, SE Ellesmere Island, Canadian Arctic

  • Luke Copland,
  • Danielle Hallé,
  • Wesley Van Wychen,
  • Benoît Lauzon,
  • Julian A. Dowdeswell,
  • Jamie Davis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/aog.2024.31

Abstract

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A surge of Mittie Glacier, a 50 km-long tidewater outlet glacier of Manson Icefield, occurred between approximately 1992 and 2007. Velocities increased slowly at first, but then increased rapidly to reach a peak of 4800 m a−1 in early 1996, the highest ever reported for a glacier in the Canadian Arctic. The surge initiated at the terminus and propagated up-glacier, with a maximum terminus advance of 7.3 km between 1994 and 1999. The surge was almost entirely restricted to the lower ~30 km of the glacier, in a region which radio-echo sounding shows to be grounded below sea level. A 3 km-wide crevasse with a 150 m opening occurred at the separation between faster moving ice downstream and slower moving ice upstream. Surge initiation appears to have been triggered by flotation of the lower terminus, caused by long-term thinning of this region during quiescence.

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