There is ample evidence for ice layers and lenses within glacial firn. The standard model for ice layer formation localizes the refreezing by perching of meltwater on pre‐existing discontinuities. Here we argue that even extreme melting events provide insufficient flux for this mechanism. Using a thermomechanical model we demonstrate a different mechanism of ice layer formation. After a melting event when the drying front catches up with the wetting front and arrests melt percolation, conductive heat loss freezes the remaining melt in place to form an ice layer. This model reproduces the depth of a new ice layer at the Dye‐2 site in Greenland. It provides a deeper insight into the interpretation of firn stratigraphy and past climate variability. It also improves the simulation of firn densification processes, a key source of uncertainty in assessing and attributing ice sheet mass balance based on satellite altimetry and gravimetry data. Plain Language Summary Firn covers a significant portion of Earth's glaciers and ice sheets. It can store surface meltwater and prevent runoff into the ocean. The widespread presence of ice layers embedded in firn formed by meltwater refreezing may prevent meltwater storage and contribute to sea level rise. However, current models of ice layer formation, originally developed for snow, do not seem to work in firn. This work presents a different mechanism for ice layer formation without invoking pre‐existing ice layers within the firn. Our model shows that the sequencing of ice layers formed by subsequent melting events depends on the overall heat added to the firn. Deeper layers occur in warmer, more porous firn during intense melt events in a warming climate. This insight enhances our understanding of firn layering and can help deduce past climate variations. Our model aids in understanding the density evolution of firn to reduce uncertainties in remote sensing data that determines the ice sheet mass loss and its contribution to global sea‐level rise.
A Mechanism for Ice Layer Formation in Glacial Firn
Shadab, M.A., S. Adhikari, A. Rutishauser, C. Grima, and M.A. Hesse (2024), A Mechanism for Ice Layer Formation in Glacial Firn, Geophys. Res. Lett., 51, e2024GL109893, doi:10.1029/2024GL109893.
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Research Program
Earth Surface & Interior Program (ESI)
Cryospheric Science Program (CSP)
Climate Variability and Change Program