Abstract

AbstractGreenland's glacial fjords are a key bottleneck in the earth system, regulating exchange of heat, freshwater and nutrients between the ice sheet and ocean and hosting societally important fisheries. We combine recent bathymetric, atmospheric, and oceanographic data with a buoyant plume model to show that summer subglacial discharge from 136 tidewater glaciers, amounting to 0.02 Sv of freshwater, drives 0.6–1.6 Sv of upwelling. Bathymetric analysis suggests that this is sufficient to renew most major fjords within a single summer, and that these fjords provide a path to the continental shelf that is deeper than 200 m for two‐thirds of the glaciers. Our study provides a first pan‐Greenland inventory of tidewater glacier fjords and quantifies regional and ice sheet‐wide upwelling fluxes. This analysis provides important context for site‐specific studies and is a step toward implementing fjord‐scale heat, freshwater and nutrient fluxes in large‐scale ice sheet and climate models.

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