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Journal article

Context for the Recent Massive Petermann Glacier Calving Event

In Eos 2011, Volume 92, Issue 14, pp. 117-118
From

Oregon State University1

California Institute of Technology2

Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland3

Fisheries and Oceans Canada4

University of Delaware5

Ohio State University6

University of Oxford7

Microwaves and Remote Sensing, National Space Institute, Technical University of Denmark8

National Space Institute, Technical University of Denmark9

University of Ottawa10

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences11

...and 1 more

On 4 August 2010, about one fifth of the floating ice tongue of Petermann Glacier (also known as “Petermann Gletscher”) in northwestern Greenland calved (Figure 1). The resulting “ice island” had an area approximately 4 times that of Manhattan Island (about 253±17 square kilometers). The ice island garnered much attention from the media, politicians, and the public, who raised concerns about downstream implications for shipping, offshore oil and gas operations, and possible connections to Arctic and global warming.

Does this event signal a change in the glacier's dynamics? Or can it be characterized as part of the glacier's natural variability? Understanding the known historical context of this event allows scientists and the public to judge its significance.

Language: English
Year: 2011
Pages: 117-118
ISSN: 23249250 and 00963941
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1029/2011EO140001

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