The Cryosphere (Jun 2017)

Hypsometric amplification and routing moderation of Greenland ice sheet meltwater release

  • D. van As,
  • A. Bech Mikkelsen,
  • M. Holtegaard Nielsen,
  • J. E. Box,
  • L. Claesson Liljedahl,
  • K. Lindbäck,
  • L. Pitcher,
  • B. Hasholt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/tc-11-1371-2017
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11
pp. 1371 – 1386

Abstract

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Concurrent ice sheet surface runoff and proglacial discharge monitoring are essential for understanding Greenland ice sheet meltwater release. We use an updated, well-constrained river discharge time series from the Watson River in southwest Greenland, with an accurate, observation-based ice sheet surface mass balance model of the ∼ 12 000 km2 ice sheet area feeding the river. For the 2006–2015 decade, we find a large range of a factor of 3 in interannual variability in discharge. The amount of discharge is amplified ∼ 56 % by the ice sheet's hypsometry, i.e., area increase with elevation. A good match between river discharge and ice sheet surface meltwater production is found after introducing elevation-dependent transit delays that moderate diurnal variability in meltwater release by a factor of 10–20. The routing lag time increases with ice sheet elevation and attains values in excess of 1 week for the upper reaches of the runoff area at ∼ 1800 m above sea level. These multi-day routing delays ensure that the highest proglacial discharge levels and thus overbank flooding events are more likely to occur after multi-day melt episodes. Finally, for the Watson River ice sheet catchment, we find no evidence of meltwater storage in or release from the en- and subglacial environments in quantities exceeding our methodological uncertainty, based on the good match between ice sheet runoff and proglacial discharge.