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Alaska’s mountain glaciers: A 10-year story

By María José Viñas/NASA’s Earth Science News Team

In Alaska, five percent of the land is covered by glaciers that are losing a lot of ice and contributing to sea level rise. To monitor these changes, a small team of NASA-funded researchers has been flying scientific instruments on a bright red, single-engine plane since spring 2009.

In almost a decade of operations, the Operation IceBridge Alaska team has more than doubled the number of mountain glaciers surveyed in the state known as “The Last Frontier.” Data from the mission has put numbers to the loss of Alaskan glaciers from 1994 to 2013: 75 gigatons of ice every year. Measurements from the campaign have helped scientists determine that most of the mass loss in Alaska’s icy fields is due to surface melt rather than warming ocean waters.

Glacier flowing into meltwater inlet.
In Alaska, 5% of the land is covered by glaciers that are contributing to sea level rise in ways disproportionately large to their size. Image via NASA.

NASA’s Operation IceBridge airborne science campaigns have been measuring Earth’s changing glaciers and ice sheets since 2009. IceBridge was conceived to avoid a gap in measurements of ice height between two satellite missions: NASA’s Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat), which stopped collecting data in 2009, and its ICESat-2, which launched in 2018. While scientists at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, managed the two larger yearly field campaigns in the Arctic and Antarctica, monitoring Alaskan glaciers fell on a smaller team based at the University of Fairbanks, Alaska.

Red plane with four-blade propellor at nose and skis on wheels.
The De Havilland Otter. Image via NASA.

Chris Larsen is lead scientist for Operation IceBridge Alaska and a research professor at University of Alaska, Fairbanks. Larsen said:

NASA wanted to find existing systems that were capable of doing these measurements from airplanes and get them going right away. University of Alaska Fairbanks had an ongoing altimetry program since 1991 and a system that was flight-ready – so we were good to go and started our flights in May 2009.

Front edge of glacier seen far below red strut of plane.
In this image, Sheridan Glacier, near Cordova, Alaska, is seen from an Operation IceBridge flight in August 2018. Sheridan is a lake-calving glacier with a rapidly disintegrating floating tongue. Image via UAF/Martin Truffer.
Aerial view of multiple-streamed river with airplane strut in foreground.
Braided River.

Challenging mountain flights

Equal in size to six Yellowstone National Parks, Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve in southeastern Alaska is the largest national park in the United States. The remote site offers breathtaking views of extensive boreal forest, braided glacial rivers and towering mountains – and also provides optimal access to many of the main icefields in the region.

Sitting in the middle of the park, hundreds of miles away from the closest paved road, is a lodge that doubles as IceBridge Alaska’s main base of operations. From there, Larsen’s team conducts two flight campaigns every year: one at the end of the accumulation season, in May, and another toward the end of the melt season, in August. Larsen said:

Both melt and ice flow both occur at much faster rates in general here than they do in Greenland and Antarctica. The difference between a glacier in May and that same glacier in August is huge.

Since the beginning of the mission, Larsen has used a laser altimeter – an instrument that fires pulses of light and times how long they take to bounce off the ice and return to the sensors – to measure changes in the surface of the ice. In 2012, he added a radar sounder to examine the bedrock beneath mountain glaciers – scientists are keen on measuring the topography near the terminus, or end, of a glacier because it often determines the glacier’s behavior.

Edge of green water far below with small shadow of airplane.
Image via NASA.

But radar, it turns out, is tricky to use with Alaska’s mountain glaciers.

Martin Truffer is an expert in ice physics at University of Alaska, Fairbanks, and IceBridge Alaska’s co-principal investigator. He said:

It can be really hard to get the radar energy all the way to the bed of the glacier – it’s actually a much harder problem than I thought when I first started.

Most glaciers in Alaska are temperate, meaning they are at their melting point from surface to base and contain large pockets of water within the ice that scatter radar waves. To further complicate things, the tall mountains encasing the narrow glacier valleys reflect radar waves as frequently as the bedrock does. This muddles the signal and makes it challenging for scientists to define the glacier’s base. Truffer said:

Radar energy just comes back from everywhere, from the mountains all around the plane, and then we have to decipher what’s coming from the glacier bed. There used to be these solar hotdog cookers, made of this U-shaped mirror that would focus all the sunlight on the hotdog. It turns out that our airplane is often where the hotdog would be.

Long, striated glacier breaking up at end into water, through puffy clouds.
Miles Glacier. Image via NASA.

A tale of three glaciers

On a bright morning on August 17, 2018, Larsen, Truffer and University of Texas undergraduate student Michael Christoffersen were ready to launch their summer campaign of science flights. The IceBridge scientists and their instruments would be traveling aboard their usual ride: a bright red, single-engine De Havilland Otter.

The Otter belongs to Paul Claus, a bush pilot who’s logged more than 35,000 flight hours, mostly in the wilderness. Claus hand-flies all of IceBridge’s data collection lines along Alaskan glaciers, because said paths are often meandering and close to ridge lines, which does not allow for autopilot. Claus’s intimate knowledge of Alaska’s tricky mountain weather is priceless for the mission’s safety and efficiency. Larsen, who is himself a commercial pilot who assists in the cockpit during flight, said:

Whenever a problem comes up, Paul has already been through it or knows how to get around it and often before it happens because he can see it coming

Larsen was moderately optimistic about the day’s forecast. He said:

The weather looks like it’s going to be good for us, but you can get the best forecast in the world for this region and still get out there and have it be totally different. We won’t know until we check it out. Paul and I have a saying: It’s easy when it’s easy, and I’m hoping we’ll get to say that today.

The day’s goals included flying over three glaciers that, though relatively close by, exhibit different behaviors – something very common among Alaskan glaciers.

One of the first targets was Yahtse Glacier, a tidewater glacier. These types of glaciers sit on deep water and have a built-in cyclicity: they naturally alternate between advancement and retreat. And currently, Yahtse is the most rapidly advancing glacier of its type in Alaska.

Soon afterward, the Otter flew over other glaciers along Icy Bay, a breathtaking body of water in southeast Alaska that presents one of the greatest coastal reliefs (difference between the highest and lowest elevation) in the world. Only a century ago, the now open waters were covered in ice.

Large, irregular chunks of ice floating in light blue water.
Icebergs in Harlequin Lake. Image via NASA.

Among the final targets of the day was Malaspina Glacier. Malaspina is North America’s largest piedmont glacier: a confluence of large valley glaciers that meet to form an almost stagnant lobe crisscrossed by psychedelic patterns of sediments. The glacier, so huge it’s visible from space, is thinning at the state-wide average of 2.3 feet (.7 meters) per year. But its massive ablation zone makes it vulnerable to future warming. Larsen said:

Malaspina has the potential for being one of the bigger geographic evolutions in Alaska of our time. Certainly, my son could be able to witness some big geography changes there, as it could open up a large lake or bay.

With a dozen glaciers surveyed on August 17, the inaugural flight of IceBridge Alaska’s summer campaign was a success. Later on, an atmospheric river drove a lot of rain to southeast Alaska, grounding Larsen’s team for several days – still, they managed to complete 50 hours of science flights. Larsen said:

August can be this way in Alaska. Our May campaign is generally better weather and more stable at that. We didn’t get it this year, but in years past it’s been wonderful – then the world is your oyster and you can choose where you want to go based on the scientific priorities.

The following month, on September 15, 2018, NASA’s ICESat-2 launched and the gap in measurements of ice height in the polar regions was finally bridged. Larsen expects the new spacecraft to perform well with mountain glaciers. Larsen said:

What is great about ICESat-2 is that it has multiple laser beams, so each pass of the satellite in effect covers multiple ground tracks – and this will help with smaller targets, such as Alaskan glaciers.

Larsen will continue to carry on IceBridge Alaska flights until summer 2020 and thus contribute to the validation of the new satellite’s measurements of ice height in the region.

Bottom line: Flying low over some of the most dramatic landscapes on the planet, a cadre of scientists and pilots have been measuring changes in Alaskan glaciers as part of NASA’s Operation IceBridge for almost a decade. The team has seen significant change in ice extent and thickness over that time.

Via NASA

Posted 
April 5, 2019
 in 
Earth

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