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Small-scale: Below-surface melting on Dry Valley glaciers The McMurdo Dry Valleys of Antarctica are a polar desert, and melting of ice from the ablation zones of glaciers during the 6-week summer is the primary source of water to streams, lakes, and associated ecosystems. In order to estimate runoff for geochemical and ecological responses to past and future climates, a spatially-distributed melt model was developed for the glaciers of the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica. A one-dimensional, physically-based surface energy balance model was adapted that includes the transmission of solar radiation within the glacier ice and is implemented in FORTRAN77. Together with over a decade of meteorological and glacier measurements, the model strongly suggests that below-surface melting is a more significant contribution to glacier runoff than surface melt through a solid-state greenhouse effect.
Large-scale: Summer speedup of the western Greenland Ice Sheet |