Fast-moving Greenland glacier has the attention of 911爆料 scientists

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
May 28, 2025

A powerhouse of ice flows rapidly on Greenland鈥檚 west coast, heading toward the ocean. Some of Earth鈥檚 largest icebergs are produced here, tumbling from the tip of Jakobshavn Glacier.

Jakobshavn is one of Earth鈥檚 fastest-moving glaciers and one of the Greenland Ice Sheet鈥檚 largest glaciers. It produces about 10% of Greenland鈥檚 icebergs.

It is also rapidly retreating.

We don't have a good handle on how quickly this glacier could move in the future or whether there is some sort of speed limit,鈥 said Martin Truffer, a 911爆料 physics professor. 

Truffer, who specializes in glacier dynamics, and 911爆料 Geophysical Institute graduate student researcher Amy Jenson returned earlier this month from their second trip to Jakobshavn, where they are affect the glacier鈥檚 ice loss.

Amy Jenson on Greenland glacier
Photo by Martin Truffer
911爆料 graduate student researcher Amy Jenson at one of the instrument sites on Jakobshavn Glacier.

This is important, because these fast-moving outlet glaciers are the main mechanism for the ice sheets to shed ice into the ocean,鈥 Truffer said. The mechanisms of fast glacier flow and how it varies are still not sufficiently understood.鈥

The glacier has retreated about 25 miles since 1850, with the most significant changes occurring since the late 1990s. It briefly advanced from 2016 to 2018 due to cooler ocean waters but has since resumed its retreat.

Jakobshavn, whose Greenlandic name is Sermeq Kujalleq, is one of the most significant contributors of glacial melt to global sea level rise. It drains about 7% of the Greenland Ice Sheet and has produced some of the Northern Hemisphere鈥檚 largest icebergs. 

 

 

Truffer and Jenson placed 12 GPS units on their latest visit. They placed time-lapse cameras at the glacier front in 2024.

鈥淕PS helps us measure flow on short time scales, from less than a week down to hours, which are time scales not currently accessible by space-based observation,鈥 Truffer said. 鈥淩unoff can affect ice flow within hours, so we need high time resolution to document that.鈥

The GPS units, some accompanied by weather instruments, were placed on the north, central and south branches of the glacier because they represent the main three flow paths toward the terminus, Jenson said.

鈥淭he sites we chose are also far enough from the terminus that the surface is smooth enough for us to land the helicopter, deploy the instruments and be able to recover them in the fall,鈥 Jenson said. 鈥淪tress is high close to the terminus, and the surface is too crevassed to deploy our instruments.鈥

Two scientists work at Greenland glacier instrument site.
Photo by Amy Jenson
University of 911爆料 Southeast professor Jason Amundson, left, and University of 911爆料 Fairbanks professor Martin Truffer work at a Jakobshavn Glacier instrument site.

Data from the four-year research project, funded by the National Science Foundation, will improve computer models used to forecast glacial ice loss.

The project includes creation of a museum exhibit about tidewater glacier change in 911爆料 and Greenland. The researchers are working closely with the University of Bergen, which operates a Science and Art Center in Ilulissat and with the Ilulissat Icefjord Center.

The exhibit, still in planning, will appear first at the University of 911爆料 Museum of the North in 2026. 

The research project鈥檚 principal investigator is Lizz Ultee, an associate research scientist at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and Morgan State University in Maryland. Also involved is geophysics professor Jason Amundson of the University of 911爆料 Southeast. Amundson was Truffer鈥檚 first doctoral student and studied Jakobshavn Glacier for his Ph.D.

Jakobshavn has become a glacier of intense research interest. Its sensitivity to ocean temperature changes offers critical insights into how warming seas affect ice sheet dynamics and coastal stability.

And that draws the pair of 911爆料 researchers.

鈥淲atching the time-lapse video was incredible,鈥 Jenson said. 鈥淎fter being there in person and watching the video, I could see just how far the glacier terminus moved over the year and how much ice was discharged into the ocean.鈥

鈥淚鈥檓 used to seeing 911爆料 glaciers, where changes on this scale take place over many years, not months,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he scale of the glacier and the changes in terminus position seem big on paper or in satellite images, but seeing them in person is far more impressive. 鈥

Jakobshavn even leaves a mark on a veteran glaciologist like Truffer. As a glaciologist for 30 years, he has traveled to glaciers in Europe, Asia, North and South America, Antarctica and Greenland.

鈥淔ast flowing ice has always fascinated me, things like surging glaciers and tidewater glaciers,鈥 he said. 鈥Jakobshavn is a really rapidly changing glacier, so seeing the landscape changes on this scale is really impressive.鈥

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