Most glaciers in South America and on the Antarctic Peninsula are retreating and thinning. They are considered strong contributors to global sea level rise. However, there is a lack of glacier mass balance studies in other areas of the Southern Hemisphere, such as the surrounding Antarctic Islands. Here, we present a detailed quantification of the 21st century glacier elevation and mass changes for the entire South Georgia Island using bi-static synthetic aperture radar interferometry between 2000 and 2013. The results suggest a significant mass loss since the beginning of the present century. We calculate an average glacier mass balance of -1.04 0.09 m w.e.a-1 and a mass loss rate of 2.28 0.19 Gt a-1 (2000-2013), contributing 0.006 0.001 mm a-1 to sea-level rise. Additionally, we calculate a subaqueous mass loss of 0.77 0.04 Gt a-1 (2003-2016), with an area change at the marine and lake-terminating glacier fronts of -6.58 0.33 km2 a-1, corresponding to ∼4% of the total glacier area. Overall, we observe negative mass balance rates in South Georgia, with the highest thinning and retreat rates at the large outlet glaciers located at the north-east coast. Although the spaceborne remote sensing dataset analysed in this research is a key contribution to better understanding of the glacier changes in South Georgia, more detailed field measurements, glacier dynamics studies or further long-term analysis with high-resolution regional climate models are required to precisely identify the forcing factors.
CITATION STYLE
Farías-Barahona, D., Sommer, C., Sauter, T., Bannister, D., Seehaus, T. C., Malz, P., … Braun, M. H. (2020). Detailed quantification of glacier elevation and mass changes in South Georgia. Environmental Research Letters, 15(3). https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ab6b32
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