4.5 Article

Spatial Response of Greenland's Firn Layer to NAO Variability

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2023JF007082

Keywords

firn; NAO; firn air content; pore space; 10-m firn temperature; Greenland ice sheet; atmospheric circulation; elevation change

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Using a combination of ice and climate models, this study examines the changes in firn layer thickness and pore space on the Greenland Ice Sheet. The research reveals that the North Atlantic Oscillation has a spatially heterogeneous impact on the thickness and pore space, with a stronger NAO leading to recovery in the south and east after a period of thinning and reduced pore space. However, other regions of the ice sheet continued to experience a loss in pore space.
Firn on the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) buffers meltwater, and has a variable thickness, complicating observations of volume change to mass change. In this study, we use a firn model (IMAU-FDM v1.2G) forced by a regional climate model (RACMO2.3p2) to investigate how the GrIS firn layer thickness and pore space have evolved since 1958 in response to variability in the large-scale atmospheric circulation. On interannual timescales, the firn layer thickness and pore space show a spatially heterogeneous response to variability in the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO). Notably, a stronger NAO following the record warm summer of 2012 led the firn layer in the south and east of the ice sheet to regain thickness and pore space after a period of thinning and reduced pore space. In the southwest, a decrease in melt dominated after 2012, whereas in the east, the main driver was an increase in snow accumulation. At the same time, the firn in the northwestern ice sheet continued to lose pore space. The NAO also varies on intra-annual timescales, being typically stronger in winter than in summer. This impacts the amplitude of the seasonal cycle in GrIS firn thickness and pore space. In the wet southeastern GrIS, most of the snow accumulates during the winter, when melting and densification are relatively weak, leading to a large seasonal cycle in thickness and pore space. The opposite occurs in other regions, where snowfall peaks in summer or autumn. This dampens the seasonal amplitude of firn thickness and pore space.

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