Coralline Algae Archive Fjord Surface Water Temperatures in Southwest Greenland

One of the most dramatic signs of ongoing global change is the mass loss of the Greenland Ice Sheet and the resulting rise in sea level, whereby most of the recent ice sheet mass loss can be attributed to an increase in meltwater runoff. The retreat and thinning of Greenland glaciers has been caused...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of geophysical research. Biogeosciences 2018-08, Vol.123 (8), p.2617-2626
Hauptverfasser: Williams, Siobhan, Halfar, Jochen, Zack, Thomas, Hetzinger, Steffen, Blicher, Martin, Juul‐Pedersen, Thomas, Kronz, Andreas, Noël, Brice, Broeke, Michiel, Berg, Willem Jan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:One of the most dramatic signs of ongoing global change is the mass loss of the Greenland Ice Sheet and the resulting rise in sea level, whereby most of the recent ice sheet mass loss can be attributed to an increase in meltwater runoff. The retreat and thinning of Greenland glaciers has been caused by rising air and ocean temperatures over the past decades. Despite the global scale impact of the changing ice sheet balance, estimates of glacial runoff in Greenland rarely extend past several decades, thus limiting our understanding of long‐term glacial response to temperature. Here we present a 42‐year long annually resolved red coralline algal Mg/Ca proxy temperature record from a southwestern Greenland fjord, with temperature ranging from 1.5 to 4 °C (standard error = 1.06 °C). This temperature time series in turn tracks the general trend of glacial runoff from four West Greenland glaciers discharging freshwater into the fjord (all p 
ISSN:2169-8953
2169-8961
2169-8961
DOI:10.1029/2018JG004385