Climate’s firm grip on glacier ablation in the Cordillera Darwin Icefield, Tierra del Fuego

The Cordillera Darwin Icefield (CDI) in Tierra del Fuego is one of the largest temperate ice bodies in the Southern Hemisphere. We simulate the climatic energy and mass balance of its glaciers (2000–2023), which are sensitive indicators of climatic changes in the Southern Hemisphere’s higher mid-latitudes. Year-round westerly winds cause strong climatic gradients across the mountain range, reflected in the energy and mass fluxes. Our results reveal a significant increase in surface melt (+0.18 m w.e. yr -1 per decade) over the past two decades. We also present the first estimate of dynamically controlled mass loss into adjacent fjords and lakes by frontal ablation, amounting to 1.44 ± 0.94 Gt yr -1 (26 % of the total CDI mass loss). Frontal losses are mainly channelized through few marine-terminating glaciers. While frontal ablation is important for predicting the fate of individual glaciers, for the CDI as a whole, atmospheric conditions exert the main control on the current glacier evolution.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Temme, Franziska ORCIDORCID record for Franziska Temme, Sommer, Christian ORCIDORCID record for Christian Sommer, Schaefer, Marius ORCIDORCID record for Marius Schaefer, Jaña, Ricardo, Arigony-Neto, Jorge ORCIDORCID record for Jorge Arigony-Neto, Gonzalez, Inti, Izagirre, Eñaut ORCIDORCID record for Eñaut Izagirre, Giesecke, Ricardo, Tetzner, Dieter ORCIDORCID record for Dieter Tetzner, Fürst, Johannes J. ORCIDORCID record for Johannes J. Fürst

On this site: Dieter Tetzner
Date:
18 March, 2025
Journal/Source:
Nature Communications / 16
Page(s):
13pp
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-57698-6