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Supraglacial lake drainage at a fast-flowing Greenlandic outlet glacier.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Christoffersen, Poul  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2643-8724
Doyle, Samuel H 
Bougamont, Marion 
Schoonman, Charlotte M 

Abstract

Supraglacial lake drainage events influence Greenland Ice Sheet dynamics on hourly to interannual timescales. However, direct observations are rare, and, to date, no in situ studies exist from fast-flowing sectors of the ice sheet. Here, we present observations of a rapid lake drainage event at Store Glacier, west Greenland, in 2018. The drainage event transported 4.8 × 106 m3 of meltwater to the glacier bed in ∼5 h, reducing the lake to a third of its original volume. During drainage, the local ice surface rose by 0.55 m, and surface velocity increased from 2.0 m⋅d-1 to 5.3 m⋅d-1 Dynamic responses were greatest ∼4 km downstream from the lake, which we interpret as an area of transient water storage constrained by basal topography. Drainage initiated, without any precursory trigger, when the lake expanded and reactivated a preexisting fracture that had been responsible for a drainage event 1 y earlier. Since formation, this fracture had advected ∼500 m from the lake's deepest point, meaning the lake did not fully drain. Partial drainage events have previously been assumed to occur slowly via lake overtopping, with a comparatively small dynamic influence. In contrast, our findings show that partial drainage events can be caused by hydrofracture, producing new hydrological connections that continue to concentrate the supply of surface meltwater to the bed of the ice sheet throughout the melt season. Our findings therefore indicate that the quantity and resultant dynamic influence of rapid lake drainages are likely being underestimated.

Description

Keywords

Greenland, glaciology, hydrology, ice sheets, lakes

Journal Title

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0027-8424
1091-6490

Volume Title

116

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Sponsorship
NERC (1795514)
European Commission Horizon 2020 (H2020) ERC (3276207)
NERC (NE/L002507/1)
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/K005871/1)
This research was funded by the European Research Council as part of the RESPONDER project under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant 683043). TRC was supported by a Natural Environment Research Council Doctoral Training Partnership Studentship (grant NE/L002507/1).