Authors
Laura J Larocca, James M Lea, Michael P Erb, Nicholas P McKay, Megan Phillips, Kara A Lamantia, Darrell S Kaufman
Publication date
2024/3/1
Journal
EGUsphere
Volume
2024
Pages
1-31
Publisher
Copernicus Publications
Description
The number of Arctic glaciers with direct, long–term measurements of mass balance is limited. Here we used satellite–based observations of the glacier snowline altitude (SLA), the location of the transition between snow cover and ice late in the summer, to approximate the position of the equilibrium line altitude (ELA)–a parameter important for mass balance assessment and for understanding the response of glaciers to climate change. We mapped the snowline (SL) on a subset of 269 land–terminating glaciers above 60 °N latitude in the latest available summer, clear–sky Landsat satellite image between 1984 and 2022. The mean SLA was extracted using the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) Global Digital Elevation Model (GDEM). We compare remotely–observed SLA observations with available long–term field–based measurements of ELA and with ERA5–Land reanalysis climate data. Over the last four decades, Arctic glacier SLAs have risen an average of ~152 m (3.9±0.4 m yr–1; R2=0.74, p<0.001), with a corresponding summer (June, July, August) temperature shift of +1.2 °C at the glacier locations. This equates to a 127±5 m shift per 1 °C of summer warming. However, along with warming, we observe an overall decrease in snowfall, an increase in rainfall, and a decrease in the total number of days in which the mean daily temperature is less than or equal to 0 °C. Glacier SLA is most strongly correlated with the number of freezing days, emphasizing the dual effect of multi–decadal trends in mean annual temperature on both ablation (increasing melt) and accumulation processes (reducing …
Scholar articles
LJ Larocca, JM Lea, MP Erb, NP McKay, M Phillips… - EGUsphere, 2024