C13B-0433:
Glaciological reconstruction of Holocene ice margins in northwestern Greenland

Monday, 15 December 2014
Sean D Birkel, University of Maine, Orono, ME, United States; Climate Change Institute, Orono, ME, United States, Erich C Osterberg, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH, United States, Meredith A Kelly, Dartmouth College, Department of Earth Sciences, Hanover, NH, United States and Yarrow Axford, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, United States
Abstract:
The past few decades of climate warming have brought overall margin retreat to the Greenland Ice Sheet. In order to place recent and projected changes in context, we are undertaking a collaborative field-modeling study that aims to reconstruct the Holocene history of ice-margin fluctuation near Thule (~76.5°N, 68.7°W), and also along the North Ice Cap (NIC) in the Nunatarssuaq region (~76.7°N, 67.4°W). Fieldwork reported by Kelly et al. (2013) reveals that ice in the study areas was less extensive than at present ca. 4700 (GIS) and ca. 880 (NIC) cal. years BP, presumably in response to a warmer climate. We are now exploring Holocene ice-climate coupling using the University of Maine Ice Sheet Model (UMISM). Our approach is to first test what imposed climate anomalies can afford steady state ice margins in accord with field data. A second test encompasses transient simulation of the Holocene, with climate boundary conditions supplied by existing paleo runs of the Community Climate System Model version 4 (CCSM4), and a climate forcing signal derived from Greenland ice cores. In both cases, the full ice sheet is simulated at 10 km resolution with nested domains at 0.5 km for the study areas. UMISM experiments are underway, and results will be reported at the meeting.