The top layer of the Greenland ice sheet consists of firn, a type of compressed snow with countless air pockets. The firn layer can be up to 100 meters thick and normally acts as a huge sponge, soaking up most of the meltwater created on the ice sheet’s surface each summer. About 90% of the entire ice sheet is covered by this firn layer, but as Arctic temperatures rise, this ice-sheet blanket is changing fast. Now, more meltwater is percolating into Greenland’s firn than previously.
„The Greenland ice sheet’s firn covered area is shrinking and we expect that the firn will lose a great deal of its current meltwater retention ability. We need to find out how the entire ice sheet will react to this,“ says Professor William Colgan from the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS). He is part of a group of researchers from four different European research institutions who just received a major grant of 13 million Euro from the European Research Councils (ERC) Synergy Grant to investigate this over the course of the next six years. The project is titled ‘Greenland’s Melting Firn and Ice Sheet Response’ – or FirnMelt in short.
The project is one of 66 projects receiving funds from the ERC Synergy Grant and synergy is a key word in the project. With different expertise of the four project leaders William Colgan, Angelika Humbert, Horst Machguth and Michiel Van den Broeke, the team plans to tackle the problem from several angles. They’ll look at ice sheet hydrology coupled to firn, linking it to meltwater discharge beneath the glacier and the interactions with overall glacier dynamics.





