Abstract

<p>The prominent North East Greenland Ice Stream (NEGIS) is an exceptionally large ice stream in the Greenland Ice sheet. It is over 500 km long, originates almost at the central ice divide, and contributes significantly to overall ice drainage from the Greenland Ice sheet. Surface velocities in the inland part of the ice stream are several times higher inside NEGIS than in the adjacent ice sheet. Modelling NEGIS is still a challenge as it remains unclear what actually causes and controls the ice stream.</p><p>An elevated geothermal heat flux is one of the factors that are being considered to trigger or drive the fast flow inside NEGIS. Unfortunately, the geothermal heat flux below NEGIS and its upstream area is poorly constrained and estimates vary from close to the global average for continental crust (ca. 60 mW/m<sup>2</sup>) to values as high as almost 1000 mW/m<sup>2</sup>. The latter would cause about 10 cm/yr of melting at the base of the ice sheet.</p><p>We present a brief survey of global geothermal heat flux data, especially from known hotspots, such as Iceland and Yellowstone. Heat fluxes in these areas that are known to be among the hottest on Earth rarely, if ever, exceed 300 mW/m<sup>2</sup>. A plume hotspot or its trail can therefore not cause heat fluxes at the high end of the suggested range. Other potential factors, such as hydrothermal fluid flow and radiogenic heat, also cannot raise the heat flux significantly. We conclude that the heat flux at NEGIS is very unlikely to exceed 100-150 mW/m<sup>2</sup>, and future modelling studies on NEGIS should thus be mindful of implementing realistic geothermal heat flux values. If NEGIS is not the result of an exceptionally high heat flux, we are left with the exciting challenge to find the true trigger of this fascinating structure.</p>

Highlights

  • Heat fluxes >>200 mW/m2 are extremely rare on Earth

  • Elevated heat fluxes occur in places of enhanced tectonic activity

  • The Iceland plume was below east Greenland >50 Myr ago

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Summary

Very high heat flux at tip of NEGIS?

Fahnestock, M., Abdalati, W., Joughin, I., Brozena, J., and Gogineni, P.: High Geothermal Heat Flow, Basal Melt, and the Origin of Rapid Ice Flow in Central Greenland, Science, 294, 2338–2342, 2001. Frequency distribution of geothermal heat fluxes on Earth Hofmeister & Criss 2005. Earth’s heat flux revised and linked to chemistry, Tectonophys. Heat fluxes >>200 mW/m2 are extremely rare on Earth. Elevated heat fluxes occur in places of enhanced tectonic activity. The Iceland plume was below east Greenland >50 Myr ago. Geothermal heat flux reveals the Iceland hotspot track underneath Greenland. "The geothermal heat flow in Iceland is highest, typically in the range 200–300 mWm−2, in the neo-volcanic zone that runs across Iceland from SW to NE".

How about shallow intrusions?
Hydrothermal fluid flow?
Maybe radioactive heat production?
Conclusions
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