Abstract

<p>Surface meltwater ponding can weaken and trigger the rapid disintegration of Antarctic ice shelves which buttress the ice sheet, causing ice flow acceleration and global sea-level rise. While supraglacial lakes (SGLs) are relatively well documented during some years and selected ice shelves in Antarctica, we have little understanding of how Antarctic-wide SGL coverage varies between melt seasons. Here, we present a record of SGL evolution around the peak of the melt season on the East Antarctic Ice Sheet (EAIS) over seven consecutive years. Our findings are based on a threshold-based algorithm applied to 2175 Landsat 8 images during the month of January from 2014 to 2020. We find that EAIS-wide SGL volume fluctuates inter-annually by up to ~80%. Moreover, patterns within regions and on neighbouring ice shelves are not necessarily synchronous. Over the whole EAIS, total SGL volume was greatest in January 2017, dominated by the Amery and Roi Baudouin ice shelves, and lowest in January 2016. Excluding these two ice shelves, SGL volume peaked in January 2020. Preliminary results suggest EAIS-wide total SGL volume and extent are weakly correlated with firn model simulations of firn air content, surface melt and minimum ice lens depth predicted by the regional climate model MAR. On certain ice shelves, years with peak SGL volume correspond with minimum firn air content. This work provides important constraints for numerical ice-shelf and ice-sheet model predictions of future Antarctic surface meltwater distributions and the potential impact on ice-sheet stability and flow.  </p>

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