The effect of meltwater descending from the surface of the ice sheet down to the bed – a kilometre or more below – is by far the largest heat source beneath the world’s second-largest ice sheet, leading to phenomenally high rates of melting at its base.
This finding was just published in a paper in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by an international team of scientists, led by the University of Cambridge and with a co-author from the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS). Based on observations from a top-to-bottom ice fracture and adjacent boreholes at Store Glacier in Western Greenland, the team calculated that as much as 82 million cubic metres of meltwater was transferred to the bed of Store Glacier every day during the summer of 2014 (the work took place over seven years).
The observed basal melt rates were often as high as the melt rates measured on the surface with a weather station. At the base, the researchers found the temperature of water to be as high as +0.88 degrees Celsius, which is unexpectedly warm for an ice sheet base with a melting point of -0.40 degrees. A significant amount of this heating was traced to the water, releasing kinetic energy when hitting the ground.


