Journal of Glaciology (Aug 2023)

Sixty years of ice form and flow at Camp Century, Greenland

  • William Colgan,
  • Jakob Jakobsen,
  • Anne Solgaard,
  • Anja Løkkegaard,
  • Jakob Abermann,
  • Shfaqat A. Khan,
  • Beata Csatho,
  • Joseph A. MacGregor,
  • Robert S. Fausto,
  • Nanna Karlsson,
  • Allan Ø. Pedersen,
  • Signe B. Andersen,
  • John Sonntag,
  • Christine S. Hvidberg,
  • Andreas P. Ahlstrøm

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2022.112
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 69
pp. 919 – 929

Abstract

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The magnitude and azimuth of horizontal ice flow at Camp Century, Greenland have been measured several times since 1963. Here, we provide a further two independent measurements over the 2017–21 period. Our consensus estimate of horizontal ice flow from four independent satellite-positioning solutions is 3.65 ± 0.13 m a−1 at an azimuth of 236 ± 2°. A portion of the small, but significant, differences in ice velocity and azimuth reported between studies likely results from spatial gradients in ice flow. This highlights the importance of restricting inter-study comparisons of ice flow estimates to measurements surveyed within a horizontal distance of one ice thickness from each other. We suggest that ice flow at Camp Century is stable on seasonal to multi-decadal timescales. The airborne and satellite laser altimetry record indicates an ice thickening trend of 1.1 ± 0.3 cm a−1 since 1994. This thickening trend is qualitatively consistent with previously inferred ongoing millennial-scale ice thickening at Camp Century. The ice flow divide immediately north of Camp Century may now be migrating southward, although the reasons for this divide migration are poorly understood. The Camp Century flowlines presently terminate in the vicinity of Innaqqissorsuup Oqquani Sermeq (Gade Gletsjer) on the Melville Bay coast.

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