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            Abstract. Light transmission into bare glacial ice affects surfaceenergy balance, biophotochemistry, and light detection and ranging (lidar)laser elevation measurements but has not previously been reported for theGreenland Ice Sheet. We present measurements of spectral transmittance at350–900 nm in bare glacial ice collected at a field site in the westernGreenland ablation zone (67.15∘ N, 50.02∘ W). Empirical irradianceattenuation coefficients at 350–750 nm are ∼ 0.9–8.0 m−1 for ice at 12–124 cm depth. The absorption minimum is at∼ 390–397 nm, in agreement with snow transmissionmeasurements in Antarctica and optical mapping of deep ice at the SouthPole. From 350–530 nm, our empirical attenuation coefficients are nearly1 order of magnitude larger than theoretical values for optically pureice. The estimated absorption coefficient at 400 nm suggests the ice volumecontained a light-absorbing particle concentration equivalent to∼ 1–2 parts per billion (ppb) of black carbon, which is similar topre-industrial values found in remote polar snow. The equivalent mineraldust concentration is ∼ 300–600 ppb, which is similar to values forNorthern Hemisphere warm periods with low aeolian activity inferred from icecores. For a layer of quasi-granular white ice (weathering crust)extending from the surface to ∼ 10 cm depth, attenuationcoefficients are 1.5 to 4 times larger than for deeper bubbly ice. Owing tohigher attenuation in this layer of near-surface granular ice, opticalpenetration depth at 532 nm is 14 cm (20 %) lower than asymptoticattenuation lengths for optically pure bubbly ice. In addition to thetraditional concept of light scattering on air bubbles, our results implythat the granular near-surface ice microstructure of weathering crust isan important control on radiative transfer in bare ice on the Greenland IceSheet ablation zone, and we provide new values of flux attenuation,absorption, and scattering coefficients to support model development andvalidation.more » « less
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            The SUMup database is a compilation of surface mass balance (SMB), subsurface temperature and density measurements from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. This 2023 release contains 4 490 442 data points: 1 778 540 SMB measurements, 2 706 413 density measurements and 5 489 subsurface temperature measurements. This is respectively 1 477 132, 420 825 and 4 715 additional observations of SMB, density and temperature compared to the 2022 release. This new release provides not only snow accumulation on ice sheets, like its predecessors, but all types of SMB measurements, including from ablation areas. On the other hand, snow depth on sea ice is discontinued, but can still be found in the previous releases. The data files are provided in both CSV and NetCDF format and contain, for each measurement, the following metadata: latitude, longitude, elevation, timestamp, method, reference of the data source and, when applicable, the name of the measurement group it belongs to (core name for SMB, profile name for density, station name for temperature). Data users are encouraged to cite all the original data sources that are being used. Issues about this release as well as suggestions of datasets to be added in next releases can be done on a dedicated user forum: https://github.com/SUMup-database/SUMup-data-suggestion/issues. Example scripts to use the SUMup 2023 files are made available on our script repository: https://github.com/SUMup-database/SUMup-example-scripts.more » « less
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            Abstract Coastal waters in the Labrador Sea are influenced by the seasonal input of meltwater from the Greenland ice sheet, which is predicted to more than double by the end of the century. Mechanisms controlling the offshore export of meltwater can have a significant effect on stratification and vertical stability in the Labrador Sea, being particularly important if the meltwater is transported toward the interior of the basin where winter convection occurs. Here we use a high‐resolution ocean model to show that coastal upwelling winds play a critical role transporting the meltwater offshore to about 150 km from the coast, where increased eddy activity and mean circulation can then transport the meltwater farther offshore. While meltwater discharged from West Greenland is either transported to Baffin Bay or circumnavigates the basin flowing mostly along isobaths, meltwater from East Greenland can reach the interior of the basin where it may influence stratification and winter convection whenever winds are anomalously upwelling favorable in late summer and early fall.more » « less
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