Frontiers in Earth Science (Jun 2023)

Proglacial river stage derived from georectified time-lapse camera images, Inglefield Land, Northwest Greenland

  • Seth N. Goldstein,
  • Jonathan C. Ryan,
  • Penelope R. How,
  • Sarah E. Esenther,
  • Lincoln H. Pitcher,
  • Lincoln H. Pitcher,
  • Adam L. LeWinter,
  • Brandon T. Overstreet,
  • Ethan D. Kyzivat,
  • Jessica V. Fayne,
  • Laurence C. Smith

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2023.960363
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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The Greenland Ice Sheet is a leading source of global sea level rise, due to surface meltwater runoff and glacier calving. However, given a scarcity of proglacial river gauge measurements, ice sheet runoff remains poorly quantified. This lack of in situ observations is particularly acute in Northwest Greenland, a remote area releasing significant runoff and where traditional river gauging is exceptionally challenging. Here, we demonstrate that georectified time-lapse camera images accurately retrieve stage fluctuations of the proglacial Minturn River, Inglefield Land, over a 3 year study period. Camera images discern the river’s wetted shoreline position, and a terrestrial LiDAR scanner (TLS) scan of riverbank microtopography enables georectification of these positions to vertical estimates of river stage. This non-contact approach captures seasonal, diurnal, and episodic runoff draining a large (∼2,800 km2) lobe of grounded ice at Inglefield Land with good accuracy relative to traditional in situ bubble-gauge measurements (r2 = 0.81, Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) ±0.185 m for image collection at 3-h frequency; r2 = 0.92, RMSE ±0.109 m for resampled average daily frequency). Furthermore, camera images effectively supplement other instrument data gaps during icy and/or low flow conditions, which challenge bubble-gauges and other contact-based instruments. This benefit alone extends the effective seasonal hydrological monitoring period by ∼2–4 weeks each year for the Minturn River. We conclude that low-cost, non-contact time-lapse camera methods offer good promise for monitoring proglacial meltwater runoff from the Greenland Ice Sheet and other harsh polar environments.

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