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Spatial extent and temporal variability of Greenland firn aquifers detected by ground and airborne radars
Author(s) -
Miège Clément,
Forster Richard R.,
Brucker Ludovic,
Koenig Lora S.,
Solomon D. Kip,
Paden John D.,
Box Jason E.,
Burgess Evan W.,
Miller Julie Z.,
McNerney Laura,
Brautigam Noah,
Fausto Robert S.,
Gogineni Sivaprasad
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: earth surface
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9011
pISSN - 2169-9003
DOI - 10.1002/2016jf003869
Subject(s) - firn , aquifer , geology , meltwater , glacier , snow , geomorphology , water table , greenland ice sheet , radar , groundwater , hydrology (agriculture) , telecommunications , geotechnical engineering , computer science
We document the existence of widespread firn aquifers in an elevation range of ~1200–2000 m, in the high snow‐accumulation regions of the Greenland ice sheet. We use NASA Operation IceBridge accumulation radar data from five campaigns (2010–2014) to estimate a firn‐aquifer total extent of 21,900 km 2 . We investigate two locations in Southeast Greenland, where repeated radar profiles allow mapping of aquifer‐extent and water table variations. In the upper part of Helheim Glacier the water table rises in spring following above‐average summer melt, showing the direct firn‐aquifer response to surface meltwater production changes. After spring 2012, a drainage of the firn‐aquifer lower margin (5 km) is inferred from both 750 MHz accumulation radar and 195 MHz multicoherent radar depth sounder data. For 2011–2014, we use a ground‐penetrating radar profile located at our Ridgeline field site and find a spatially stable aquifer with a water table fluctuating less than 2.5 m vertically. When combining radar data with surface topography, we find that the upper elevation edge of firn aquifers is located directly downstream of locally high surface slopes. Using a steady state 2‐D groundwater flow model, water is simulated to flow laterally in an unconfined aquifer, topographically driven by ice sheet surface undulations until the water encounters crevasses. Simulations suggest that local flow cells form within the Helheim aquifer, allowing water to discharge in the firn at the steep‐to‐flat transitions of surface topography. Supported by visible imagery, we infer that water drains into crevasses, but its volume and rate remain unconstrained.

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