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The 79°N Glacier cavity modulates subglacial iron export to the NE Greenland Shelf
Krisch, S.; Hopwood, M.J.; Schaffer, J.; Al-Hashem, A.; Höfer, J.; Rutgers van der Loeff, M.; Conway, T.M.; Summers, B.A.; Lodeiro, P.; Ardiningsih, I.; Steffens, T.; Achterberg, E.P. (2021). The 79°N Glacier cavity modulates subglacial iron export to the NE Greenland Shelf. Nature Comm. 12(1): 3030. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-23093-0

Additional data:
In: Nature Communications. Nature Publishing Group: London. ISSN 2041-1723; e-ISSN 2041-1723, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Authors  Top 
  • Krisch, S.
  • Hopwood, M.J.
  • Schaffer, J.
  • Al-Hashem, A.
  • Höfer, J.
  • Rutgers van der Loeff, M.
  • Conway, T.M.
  • Summers, B.A.
  • Lodeiro, P.
  • Ardiningsih, I., more
  • Steffens, T.
  • Achterberg, E.P.

Abstract
    Approximately half of the freshwater discharged from the Greenland and Antarctic Ice Sheets enters the ocean subsurface as a result of basal ice melt, or runoff draining via the grounding line of a deep ice shelf or marine-terminating glacier. Around Antarctica and parts of northern Greenland, this freshwater then experiences prolonged residence times in large cavities beneath floating ice tongues. Due to the inaccessibility of these cavities, it is unclear how they moderate the freshwater associated supply of nutrients such as iron (Fe) to the ocean. Here, we show that subglacial dissolved Fe export from Nioghalvfjerdsbrae (the ‘79°N Glacier’) is decoupled from particulate inputs including freshwater Fe supply, likely due to the prolonged ~162-day residence time of Atlantic water beneath Greenland’s largest floating ice-tongue. Our findings indicate that the overturning rate and particle-dissolved phase exchanges in ice cavities exert a dominant control on subglacial nutrient supply to shelf regions.

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