Isolated cavities dominate Greenland Ice Sheet dynamic response to lake
drainage.
Abstract
Seasonal variability in the Greenland Ice Sheet’s (GrIS) sliding speed
is regulated by the response of the subglacial drainage system to
meltwater inputs. However, the importance of channelization relative to
the dewatering of isolated cavities in controlling seasonal ice
deceleration remains unsolved. Using ice velocity, moulin hydraulic
head, and glaciohydraulic tremor measurements we show the passing of a
subglacial floodwave following the drainage of an up-glacier
supraglacial lake slowed minimum sliding speeds to wintertime background
values without increasing the hydraulic capacity of the moulin-connected
drainage system. We interpret these results to reflect a persistent
basal traction increase consistent with the dewatering of isolated
cavities exert the dominant control on seasonal ice velocity decreases.
Current predictions of the GrIS’s ice-dynamic response to increased
surface melting hinges on the subglacial drainage system’s ability to
increase its capacity to offset sustained meltwater influxes, which our
results demonstrate may not be the case.