Abstract

A national glacier outline inventory for several different epochs since the end of the Little Ice Age (LIA) in Iceland has been created with input from several research groups and institutions, and has been submitted to the GLIMS (Global Land Ice Measurements from Space, nsidc.org/glims) database, where it is openly available. The glacier outlines have been revised and updated for consistency and the most representative outline chosen. The maximum glacier extent during the LIA was not reached simultaneously in Iceland, but many glaciers started retreating from their outermost LIA moraines around 1890. The total area of glaciers in Iceland in 2021 was ~10,300 km2. The total glacier area has decreased by ~2300 km2 since the end of the 19th century and by ~830 km2 since ca. 2000. During the first two decades of the 21st century, the decrease rate has on average been ~40 km2 a–1. In this period, some tens of small glaciers have disappeared entirely. Temporal glacier inventories are important for climate change studies, for calibration of glacier models, for studies of glacier surges and glacier dynamics, and they are essential for better understanding of the state of glaciers. Although surges, volcanic eruptions and jökulhlaups influence the position of some glacier termini, glacier variations have been rather synchronous in Iceland, largely following climatic variations since the end of the 19th century.  The glacier outlines are also available on a new glacier web portal (www.islenskirjoklar.is), together with measurements of frontal positions and mass balance and numerous photographs of glaciers at different times. The photographic glacier archive will be updated through systematic photographic surveys, including rephotography of historical photos, based on a collaboration of the Iceland Glaciological Society and Extreme Ice Survey. This website, which is intended for scientists, students and lay people alike, is a joint effort of institutions involved in glacier research in Iceland and the Iceland Glaciological Society. It will serve as a powerful tool for outreach on glacier and climate change in Iceland. The glacier inventory is planned to be updated every other year in the future as part of regular monitoring of glacier changes in Iceland. Furthermore, the larger ice caps will be divided into ice-flow basins along the ice divides of individual outlet glaciers determined from ice-surface DEMs, which will allow for more detailed analysis of area variations with time.

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