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Detailed Greenland glacier data released
by Staff Writers
Pasadena CA (JPL) Jan 03, 2017


The Oceans Melting Greenland campaign has released new, more accurate maps of Greenland's coastal glaciers. Image courtesy NASA/JPL-Caltech. For a larger version of this image please go here.

NASA's Oceans Melting Greenland (OMG) mission has released preliminary data on the heights of Greenland coastal glaciers from its first airborne campaign in March 2016.

The new data show the dramatic increase in coverage that the mission provides to scientists and other interested users. Finalized data on glacier surface heights, accurate within three feet (one meter) or less vertically, will be available by Feb. 1, 2017.

As glaciers break off, melt and retreat, they generally speed up. That makes them stretch out and causes their top surfaces to drop lower.

By observing how Greenland glaciers' heights change throughout the five-year OMG campaign, scientists will be able to infer how the volume of ice in the glaciers is changing.

The new survey was made with a NASA instrument called the GLacier and Ice Surface Topography INterferometer (GLISTIN-A), which produces very accurate maps of surface topography with high spatial resolution.

Because the instrument is flown on an aircraft, it can survey far more of Greenland's coastal glaciers than have previously been studied from ground level, with far more detail than is currently available in satellite observations.

In a new video, OMG principal investigator Josh Willis of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, compares pre-OMG coverage of the Jakobshavn region of Greenland with coverage obtained by GLISTIN-A this spring.

The detailed scientific data from the OMG GLISTIN-A campaign are here and OMG's fall ocean probe data are also available here


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Related Links
OMG GLISTIN-A campaign
Beyond the Ice Age






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Previous Report
ICE WORLD
Most of Greenland ice melted to bedrock in recent geologic past
New York NY (SPX) Dec 13, 2016
Scientists have found evidence in a chunk of bedrock drilled from nearly two miles below the summit of the Greenland ice sheet that the sheet nearly disappeared for an extended time in the last million years or so. The finding casts doubt on assumptions that Greenland has been relatively stable during the recent geological past, and implies that global warming could tip it into decline more prec ... read more


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