Abstract

Numerous studies have been conducted to enhance our understanding of how climate change impacts landfast ice and its break-up in spring or summer. Yet, predictions of break-up timing have proven elusive illusive, and dependent on multiple environmental drivers. In this study, we investigate whether/to what extent snow melt on land adjacent to the coast can serve as a precursor to landfast ice break-up. For the study, we used MODIS snowmelt timing products to explore the pattern of snowmelt across the study area. This was compared against landfast ice break-up dates generated mainly from CIS ice-chart, across the Hudson Bay and James Bay coast. Snowmelt timings recorded across the study area followed the same latitudinal gradient as the landfast ice break-up dates, with almost a 50-day difference between the south and the north snowmelt and ice break-up timings. The data shows that the timing of landfast ice break-up across the Hudson Bay and James Bay region showed significantly stronger correlations with the timing of terrestrial snowmelt, as compared to air temperature thresholds, with an average 17-day gap observed between snowmelt to landfast ice break-up. Based on the observations, we believe snowmelt can be a reliable precursor to landfast ice break-up.

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