A meander in the meltwater valley
At the edge of the Greenland Ice Sheet, surface melt releases old layers of dust, that have travelled thousands of years into the ice. Under sunny weather, the dust heats up with radiation, melts the ice underneath, and thus accumulates in tiny potholes and meltwater creeks. However, this photo was taken after a rainy day. The rain triggered increased melt on the surface of the ice irrelevant of its color, resetting this miniature drainage system, but enhancing larger-scale drainage features. While working everyday on the ice, I used this particular meander as a landmark to find my way on the hilly surface of the glacier.
Category
Location
- North America (751)
- Northern America (588)
- Greenland (69)
- Exact location (-68.5559 W, 77.6852 N)
Tags
- ice (130)
- glacier (182)
- meltwater (9)
- greenland (50)
- ice sheet (17)
- dust (8)
- bowdoin (3)
- meander (1)
Colours
Image properties
3840 × 2560 px;
image/jpeg; 4.1 MB
Camera:
Fujifilm X-T10
Software: Darktable
Taken on 21
July
2016
Submitted on 21 November 2018
Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported (CC BY-SA 3.0)
Credit
Julien Seguinot (distributed via imaggeo.egu.eu)
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