Jökull


Jökull - 01.01.2020, Side 15

Jökull - 01.01.2020, Side 15
Hannesdóttir et al. the major glaciers in Iceland. The warm spring and summer of 2019 enhanced melting of seasonal snow, exposing glacier margins, and enabled the delineation of the actual ice margin for the first time in several years at many locations. Orthorectified aerial images from the company Loftmyndir ehf. were also used in some areas. The smallest glaciers (< 3 km2, shown in blue in Figure 1) and the groups listed in Table 1 were not digitized from those images and changes in their extent were assumed to be negligible compared with 2017. Glacier surges Changes in the extent of Icelandic glaciers not only depend on variations in mass-balance driven by cli- mate change, but also on factors such as surge activity (Björnsson et al., 2003), subglacial volcanic eruptions (Guðmundsson, 2005), and jökulhlaups (e.g. Guð- mundsson and Larsen, 2013). The largest surges of glaciers, such as the one of Brúarjökull in 1890 and 1963–1964, that resulted in an advance of the termi- nus of the entire outlet glacier by ∼10 km with an in- crease in the glacier area by > 160 km2 (Þórarinsson, 1969; Guðmundsson et al., 1996), have a large effect on the glacier extent. The 1963–1964 surge of Brúar- jökull is the only surge in Iceland of this magnitude since the end of the LIA; other surges in Iceland in this time period typically being in the range ∼0.3– 2 km as noted before. Most known surge-type outlet glaciers of the main ice caps, including all the main outlet glaciers of western Vatnajökull, surged during the 1990s. The largest surges affecting the variations of glacier termini are discussed for each glacier in the corresponding subsections in the Results section be- low. Area calculations In this paper, area calculations are, as is commonly used in Iceland, made with the national ISN93 co- ordinate system, which utilizes the Lambert con- formal conic projection with two standard parallels (EPSG:3057). This is slightly different from area cal- culations in the GLIMS glacier database where area calculations are carried out in the NSIDC EASE- Grid that uses the WGS-84 datum and a cylindrical equal-area projection (EPGS:3975). The differences are, however, not noticeable, except for Vatnajökull, where the difference amounts to a couple of km2. Users of the dataset do, however, need to be aware that area calculations will give different results based on the coordinate systems they choose to use. For the glacier area calculations, ice patches that have become detached from the main body of each glacier since the LIA are included in the glacier area. RESULTS The retreat and advance history of glaciers in Iceland since the end of the LIA is fairly consistent across the country according to the outline data set. Most glaciers started to retreat from the outermost termi- nal LIA moraines in the 1880s and 1890s. The retreat accelerated after 1900 and almost all glacier termini retreated rapidly in the 1930s and 1940s, with occa- sional exceptions due to surges (Figure 3). The re- treat slowed down, most termini stagnated and many glaciers readvanced after 1960. The glaciers started to retreat again due to increased temperatures after 1995 (Figure 2). The retreat rate of many glaciers since 2000 has been similar to that in the 1930s and the 1940s, although a few glaciers show up to double re- treat rates during the latter period compared with the earlier one (see spordakost.jorfi.is). In the following subsections, maps of the main ice caps and glaciers are presented with the outlines of the maximum LIA glacier extent in ∼1890 (except for Drangajökull at ∼1850), in 1945–1946, 1970–1980, ∼2000, 2007–2013 and 2019, see Table 2 for infor- mation about each outline and the corresponding area. Vatnajökull and Tungnafellsjökull Vatnajökull ice cap lost 1069 km2 during the period ∼1890–2019, equal to 12% of its maximum LIA ex- tent, whereof close to half of the area loss (460 km2) occurred during the period ∼1890–1945 (Table 2). The main area loss occurs at the large outlet glaciers to the south, Breiðamerkurjökull and Skeiðarárjök- ull, Tungnaárjökull to the west, and Brúarjökull and Eyjabakkajökull to the north (Figure 4). They are all surge-type glaciers. The rate of area change was high- est during the first 2 decades of the 21st century, on the order of −36 km2 a−1 to −44 km2 a−1. 12 JÖKULL No. 70, 2020
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