Source: AGU Advances
Models of glacial flow and retreat rely on estimates of glacial ice viscosity, the measure of the ice’s resistance to flow.
Ice viscosity is dependent on the stress applied to the glacier. Most ice sheet models use a standard equation to model ice flow that includes the variable n, called the stress exponent. A larger value of n means ice viscosity is more sensitive to changes in stress. For decades, glaciologists have, almost exclusively, used an assumed n value of 3
Models of glacial flow and retreat rely on estimates of glacial ice viscosity, the measure of the ice’s resistance to flow.
Ice viscosity is dependent on the stress applied to the glacier. Most ice sheet models use a standard equation to model ice flow that includes the variable n, called the stress exponent. A larger value of n means ice viscosity is more sensitive to changes in stress. For decades, glaciologists have, almost exclusively, used an assumed n value of 3 in the models they use to predict ice flow.
However, through recent experiments and observations, researchers have found that an n value of 4 may actually better represent the conditions of Earth’s ice sheets and glaciers.
Martin et al. created a model representation of the fast-retreating Pine Island Glacier in West Antarctica. The ice sheet in their model had a true n value of 4, but they ran model projections using both n = 4 and n = 3. That allowed them to observe how their model would incorrectly predict glacial flow and resulting sea level change, given an incorrect n value.
The researchers modeled glacial retreat for 100 years under both equations with two different glacial melting scenarios. They then modeled glacial recovery for another 300 years. Under a moderate scenario, the n = 3 model underestimated glacial retreat by 18% and sea level change contributions by 21%. Under an extreme melting scenario, the model underestimated sea level contributions by 35%.
Notably, those disparities in glacial retreat and sea level change contribution predictions increased more than would be expected between the two scenarios, potentially increasing the level of uncertainty in current projections of sea level change. The researchers also suggest that incorrect n values may be mistakenly attributed to other physical processes in current ice sheet models.
The results could have far-reaching implications for predictions of future glacial melt and may prompt investigations into its effects on sea level, the authors say. (AGU Advances, https://doi.org/10.1029/2025AV001946, 2026)
—Madeline Reinsel, Science Writer
Citation: Reinsel, M. (2026), Glaciers may flow into the ocean more quickly than we think, Eos, 107, https://doi.org/10.1029/2026EO260107. Published on 14 April 2026.
A critical ocean current that regulates Antarctica’s climate may have formed only once continents separated and winds aligned with new ocean passageways, according to a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
Today, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current transports more than 100 times as much water as all of Earth’s rivers combined and, critically, insulates the Antarctic Ice Sheet from heat at lower latitudes. A clear picture of
Today, the Antarctic Circumpolar Current transports more than 100 times as much water as all of Earth’s rivers combined and, critically, insulates the Antarctic Ice Sheet from heat at lower latitudes. A clear picture of the origins of this current can help scientists further understand the relationships between contemporary ocean dynamics, the global climate, and ice formation in Antarctica.
“It’s very interesting to learn more about this current, how it developed, and what role it played in the climate change that was happening at that time,” said Hanna Knahl, a paleoclimatologist and doctoral student at the Alfred-Wegener-Institut in Germany and lead author of the new study.
The Birth of a Current
About 34 million years ago, Earth was undergoing a climatic shift, now known as the Eocene-Oligocene transition, during which atmospheric carbon dioxide decreased and the planet cooled.
Earth’s tectonic plates in the Southern Ocean moved away from each other, opening and deepening bodies of water such as the Tasmanian Gateway and the Drake Passage, which separate Antarctica, Australia, and South America.
For years, scientists hypothesized that the alignment of these newly formed waterways, along with westerly winds, could have channeled ocean water and spurred the formation of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current.
“The exact position of the westerly winds and their relative position to the [ocean] gateways have to click together.”
To test that hypothesis, Knahl and her colleagues simulated conditions of the early Oligocene Southern Ocean with a coupled model that included ocean dynamics, atmosphere and wind patterns, temperatures, ice sheet growth, and precipitation. The research team compared these simulations to data from actual Antarctic sediment cores and scans of the ocean floor.
Results confirmed that westerly winds were necessary for the Antarctic Circumpolar Current to form.
“The exact position of the westerly winds and their relative position to the [ocean] gateways have to click together,” Knahl said.
Joanne Whittaker, a marine geophysicist at the University of Tasmania who was not involved in the new study, was a coauthor of a 2015 study that proposed westerly wind alignment played a role in the formation of the current. Knahl’s study presents a more sophisticated model of the early Oligocene Southern Ocean and is a great next step in the investigation of the current’s origins, Whittaker said.
“They did a really nice job of taking a range of different people’s work and linking it all together,” she said.
Oligocene Understandings
“If you can have a model that works in the past, it’s going to give you confidence that it’s going to work for the future, as well.”
Scientists often use Earth’s past behavior to better understand how Earth systems may behave in the present or future. “If you can have a model that works in the past,” Whittaker explained, “it’s going to give you confidence that it’s going to work for the future, as well.”
The Eocene-Oligocene transition is a key to understanding the relationship between atmospheric carbon, ocean dynamics, and the glaciation of Antarctica, Whittaker said. Knowing how the current’s behavior affected carbon uptake millions of years ago helps scientists model how the present current’s behavior might also affect atmospheric carbon.
In addition to carbon uptake, the new research hints at how changes in westerly winds may influence the advance and retreat of the Antarctic Ice Sheet. Some modeling and proxy data indicate the westerly winds that spurred the Antarctic Circumpolar Current’s formation 34 million years ago have shifted in the past century and may continue to shift in the future. Understanding the role these winds initially played in the current’s development may shed light on the current’s present ability to guard the Antarctic Ice Sheet from warmer air masses.
There are still Oligocene patterns that require more research to sort out, though. For example, modeling in the new study showed interesting asymmetries in the timing of the development of different parts of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current, Knahl said. Scientists know from proxy data and modeling that similar asymmetry exists in the history of the Antarctic Ice Sheet; the ice sheet in East Antarctica began to form about 7 million years before the ice sheet began to form in West Antarctica.
“It could be interesting to see if there’s a connection between the asymmetries that we see here,” Knahl said. “Are they linked, or were they more or less independent?”
Citation: van Deelen, G. (2026), Widening channels and westerly winds together formed Earth’s strongest current, Eos, 107, https://doi.org/10.1029/2026EO260126. Published on 24 April 2026.
Research & Developments is a blog for brief updates that provide context for the flurry of news that impacts science and scientists today.
Human-driven climate change is driving the rise of sea levels, worsening flood conditions and threatening coastal communities around the world. Not only is sea level rising, but it’s rising faster every year. Understanding the degree to which different processes contribute to sea level, known as the sea level budget, can help scientists better pre
Research & Developments is a blog for brief updates that provide context for the flurry of news that impacts science and scientists today.
Human-driven climate change is driving the rise of sea levels, worsening flood conditions and threatening coastal communities around the world. Not only is sea level rising, but it’s rising faster every year. Understanding the degree to which different processes contribute to sea level, known as the sea level budget, can help scientists better predict where and how quickly sea level will rise under potential climate futures.
But for several decades there has been a “budget gap” between measurements of sea level change and the total estimated contributions from glaciers, polar ice, land storage, and oceans expanding as they heat up (thermospheric expansion). Research published today in Science Advances has helped close that budget gap by incorporating more recent sea level observations, reconciling measurements taken by different instruments, and including recent community estimates of sea level rise and its components.
The new analysis breaks down the drivers of sea level rise from 1960 to 2023. The team found that the largest contributor is heat-driven expansion of seawater, responsible for 43% of sea level rise since 1960. Melting ice contributed the next largest amount of sea level rise: 27% came from mountain glaciers, while 15% came from the Greenland Ice Sheet and 12% from the Antarctic Ice Sheet. Lastly, sea level rose 3% as land reduced its capacity to store water.
Since 1960, 43% of global sea level rise can be attributed to thermal expansion of water, just 3% to a reduction in land water storage, and the remainder from melting ice and glaciers. Credit: Zheng et al., Science Advances (2026)
“For years, there has been a frustrating gap between how much the oceans were observed to be rising and how much we could explain from the individual causes,” John Abraham, an engineer at the University of St. Thomas in St Paul, Minn., and a coauthor on the new research, said in a press release. “This work shows that, with better instruments, processes, and smarter analysis, this knowledge gap can be closed. We can explain sea level rise with greater confidence.”
The researchers also calculated the rate at which sea level has risen since 1960 and how each component factored in. They found that the rate of sea level rise has recently doubled: It was 2 millimeters per year averaged over 1960–2023 and 4 millimeters per year averaged over just 2005–2023. The strongest driver of that doubling is ocean warming, responsible for 41% of the accelerating rate of sea level rise, followed by reduced land water storage (21%).
In the past, glacial melt was the largest contributor to sea level rise before it was overtaken by thermospheric ocean expansion overtook (left). The rate of sea level rise has been speeding up since about 1980, also driven by thermospheric ocean expansion (right). Credit: Zheng et al., Science Advances (2026)
This research demonstrates the importance of maintaining detailed records of sea level rise, collecting new measurements, and not backing away from global change research. With better data on which processes contribute to sea level rise and its acceleration, policymakers and local communities can create informed mitigation strategies that account for future rise.
These updates are made possible through information from the scientific community. Do you have a story about science or scientists? Send us a tip at eos@agu.org.
The retreat of glaciers and ice sheets is expected to have widespread impacts on communities around the world because of its effect on sea levels. Already, the global average sea level is more than 10 centimeters higher than it was just 3 decades ago; and the rate of rise is increasing, contributing to increased storm surges and flooding, lost infrastructure and community lands, and more.
Recent reports on the instability of Antarctica’s Thwaites Glacier, for example, have focused attention
The retreat of glaciers and ice sheets is expected to have widespread impacts on communities around the world because of its effect on sea levels. Already, the global average sea level is more than 10 centimeters higher than it was just 3 decades ago; and the rate of rise is increasing, contributing to increased storm surges and flooding, lost infrastructure and community lands, and more.
Recent reports on the instability of Antarctica’s Thwaites Glacier, for example, have focused attention on how accelerating ice flow can lead to ice sheet collapse and rising sea levels.
Earth’s ice sheets accumulate ice through snowfall and lose mass through a mix of surface ablation, iceberg calving, and melting at their interface with the ocean. Glacial ice flows under its own weight, and the rate at which it flows to coastal areas is a primary control on ice sheet mass loss.
Flow rates depend on how much resistance an ice sheet encounters at its interface with the ground (e.g., whether it is frozen to its substrate) and on its effective viscosity, a measure of how strongly it resists deformation. The viscosity of ice, in turn, varies based on properties including temperature, crystal size and orientation, and impurity content.
Some properties within and beneath ice sheets that affect how they flow are anisotropic, meaning they vary by direction. For example, roughness in some directions at the ice bed can facilitate ice sliding more effectively than roughness in other directions, similar to the way a properly oriented corrugated metal roof allows snow to slide off. Several forms of anisotropy within ice also affect how ice flows from land to ocean (Figure 1).
Fig. 1. Anisotropy in glaciers and ice sheets has various sources, including from ice fabric and other properties within the ice (englacial) or at the ice-bed interface. Many forms of anisotropy in glacial ice can be measured with radar. Credit: Adapted from Hills et al., 2025, https://doi.org/10.1029/2024RG000842, CC BY 4.0
Measuring anisotropic properties is key to better understanding how quickly changes at the edges of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets will lead to sea level rise. Recent advances in ice-penetrating radar technology and in processing radar data are revolutionizing how we observe directionally varying ice sheet properties, paving the way for projections of mass changes that account for previously neglected processes.
Crystal Fabric: Memory and Modulator of Ice Flow
Fabric, the orientation of crystals composing ice, is the best studied and arguably most important of anisotropic ice sheet properties. As ice deforms, for example, by stretching horizontally as it flows toward the coast, its millimeter-scale crystals are reoriented (Figure 1).
Fabric thus contains a memory of past flow. Simultaneously, fabric influences flow because ice crystals are about 3 orders of magnitude easier to shear in some directions than others—similar to how stacked playing cards slide easily against each other when held along their edges but resist motion when pinched top to bottom.
Over the past 20 years, radar polarimetry has matured into a quicker and easier alternative means for inferring fabric.
The potential importance of fabric on large-scale ice flow has long been recognized, but a shortage of observations has made it difficult to quantify and validate its effect in ice sheet models. Until recently, fabric could be measured only directly in ice cores or inferred through seismic soundings. These methods provide highly detailed information about how fabric develops but are expensive, logistically taxing, and provide information only about sparse point locations.
Over the past 20 years, though, radar polarimetry has matured into a quicker and easier alternative means for inferring fabric, enabling observations at the scale of entire glaciers and providing new constraints on how fabric influences ice sheet flow.
How Radar Reveals Fabric
Ice-penetrating radar instruments emit electromagnetic energy as radio frequency waves. These waves reflect off interfaces within and beneath glacial ice, including transitions in ice chemistry and the contact surface between the ice sheet and the ground or water below. The properties of the reflected waves are then measured when they return to the radar. Just as fabric leads to anisotropic ice deformation, it also introduces directional dependence in the measured electrical properties.
The speed of a radar wave through an ice crystal is approximately 1% faster if the wave is polarized across the crystal’s principal (c) axis rather than aligned with it. Though small, this difference can compound enough that it causes measurable changes in returned radar signals.
In a typical radar survey over anisotropic ice, waves with different polarizations travel at slightly different speeds (Figure 2). The times that return signals arrive back at the receiver thus vary directionally, a difference that can be identified using polarimetric radars that transmit and receive radio waves at multiple orientations.
Fig. 2. Propagation of polarized radio waves through anisotropic ice reveals structural variations with depth because waves aligned across the prevailing ice fabric (represented by the ball, in which darker shading indicates a greater concentration of c axes) travel faster than waves aligned with the fabric. The phase delay increases as the effect of the anisotropy accumulates with depth. Credit: Adapted from Hills et al., 2025, https://doi.org/10.1029/2024RG000842, CC BY 4.0
Fabric’s effect on radar signal travel times accumulates through an ice column, so it is more prominent in thicker ice with stronger horizontal fabric (i.e., the ice crystals are more consistently aligned). In such cases, differences in travel times between polarizations can be measured even by standard radars.
When fabric is weaker or ice is thinner, the offset is smaller and detectable only by systems that can identify the phases of radar returns—that is, the exact positions of the returned waves in their oscillation cycle. Even small wave speed differences from weak fabrics accumulate into measurable phase shifts between polarizations, which can be used to determine the consistency of crystal alignment and the predominant crystal orientation.
Small differences in fabric through an ice column can also change the strength, or amplitude, of returned signals. This amplitude difference offers an independent way to identify fabric orientation and its depth variation.
Polarimetric radar has been widely applied in cryospheric science in recent years largely due to the advent of low-cost systems that can measure signal phases. For example, the popular Autonomous phase-sensitive Radio Echo Sounder (ApRES) is a lightweight, ground-based system that can be used to infer ice fabric at single points down to 2 kilometers deep. In the past decade, polarimetric ApRES systems have revealed ice flow histories, including changes in flow directions, of key glaciers over the past few millennia. These measurements offer windows into how ice sheets responded to previous climate variations.
A mobile, quad-polarimetric radar is dragged by snowmobile over the surface of Müller Ice Cap on Axel Heiberg Island in Nunavut, Canada, in May 2023. Credit: David Lilien
The next generation of polarimetric radars go beyond one-point-at-a-time stationary soundings, offering full polarimetry capabilities on moving platforms. These systems may soon allow scientists to map directional ice properties at the scale of entire ice sheets.
Insights into Fast-Flowing Ice Fabric
The growing number of radar studies conducted near sites where ice cores have been collected, which allow fabric to be investigated up close, has provided validation and bolstered confidence that fabric can be inferred accurately from its effects on radar. Researchers now infer fabric from radar in more dynamic areas, such as Thwaites Glacier, Whillans Ice Stream, and the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream (NEGIS), where ice fabrics change over short spatial scales and where drilling ice cores is logistically difficult. Airborne radar surveys are particularly effective in these settings because they can efficiently map fabric variations across large, fast-moving areas.
Observations of strong fabrics in fast-flowing regions suggest that fabric is an important control on ice viscosity, although its implications for ice flow are just beginning to be explored. For example, at Rutford Ice Stream in Antarctica, ApRES data indicate that fabric causes sharp changes in viscosity in different directions with depth, a complexity not captured by current ice flow models.
A combination of airborne and ground-based radar shows that the fabric of the NEGIS varies substantially across the ice stream, which facilitates horizontal shear that allows faster and more cohesive flow in the middle of the ice stream while simultaneously stiffening this ice against along-flow stretching. These viscosity variations may alter how quickly coastal changes, such as increased melt due to climate warming, influence inland ice flow.
Scientists have studied ice sheet mass balance at glacier-mounted stations along the renowned “K-transect” near Kangerlussuaq in southwestern Greenland since the early 1990s. This image shows a view up the transect in April 2025. Polarimetric radar offers another tool with which to study ice flow here and at other locations on the ice sheets. Credit: Tamara Gerber
The emerging consensus from radar observations and recent progress in fabric modeling is that ice fabric can soften ice stream shear margins by a factor of 10. In other words, the fabric tends to develop in a way that greatly reduces the ice’s effective viscosity at lateral boundaries between fast-flowing and slower-flowing ice, which enables the ice to deform more easily at the margins. The agreement between observations and process-scale modeling highlights fabric as a major, but largely ignored, control on ice flow that may affect estimates of how ice dynamics will contribute to future sea level rise.
Beyond Fabric
Most polarimetric radar studies so far have focused on fabric, but other ice characteristics can cause directional effects too. For instance, bubbles trapped in ice have dramatically different properties than ice itself. Ice deformation can bring bubbles into alignment, such that they affect radar waves differently in different directions.
Likewise, ice at its melting point can contain liquid water along boundaries between crystals, and if those pockets of water are aligned in one direction, they can also affect radar returns. Each of these properties has important influences on ice flow, but their implications are yet to be explored.
Another source of anisotropy is the bottom boundary of the ice sheet. This interface can be rougher in some directions than others, though the roughness is typically aligned with the prevailing ice flow direction or the direction of meltwater trapped within the ice.
Polarimetric radar can measure directionally dependent properties of ice sheet bases at a finer scale than radar profiling can. Such work is leading to new insights into glacier geomorphology, interactions of ice shelf bottoms with the underlying ocean, and how ice slides over substrate surfaces. Rates and extents of sub-ice-shelf melt and basal sliding are widely recognized as key controls on the future of the ice sheets.
Expanding Horizons: Large-Scale and Planetary Applications
Radar polarimetry has already transformed our understanding of ice fabric, revealing much about how crystal alignment modulates the flow of Earth’s ice sheets and filling critical gaps between the handful of direct measurements from ice cores. As polarimetric techniques mature, their applications are expanding.
Researchers are moving from studying isolated profiles of ice fabric to mapping it across whole basins, a key shift for validating bespoke models of fabric and its effects on flow. These models are also rapidly developing to include additional physical processes (e.g., migration recrystallization) and key simplifications (e.g., reducing directionally varying viscosity to a single number) that allow them to interface more easily with—and be incorporated into—large-scale models used for projecting sea level rise.
Techniques pioneered for measuring ice on Earth may also prove useful elsewhere in the solar system.
Techniques pioneered for measuring ice on Earth may also prove useful elsewhere in the solar system. Orbital radar sounders have already probed Mars’s ice masses, and the icy shell of Jupiter’s moon Europa will soon be surveyed by single-polarization radars aboard NASA’s Europa Clipper and the European Space Agency’s Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE). These radars might be useful for polarimetry at some locations on Europa, which could reveal past and present motion of ice features and answer fundamental questions about the moon. Whether Europa’s shell flows, for example, may be key to whether its subsurface ocean can harbor life.
As polarimetric radar systems become routine tools for glaciologists and as similar instruments begin operating on spacecraft exploring icy worlds, a technique once limited to a few isolated core sites on Earth could be poised to transform our understanding of ice across the solar system.
Author Information
David Lilien (dlilien@iu.edu), Indiana University Bloomington; T. J. Young, University of St Andrews, Fife, Scotland; Benjamin Hills, Colorado School of Mines, Golden; Tamara Gerber, Université de Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland; and Matthew Siegfried, Colorado School of Mines, Golden
Citation: Lilien, D., T. J. Young, B. Hills, T. Gerber, and M. Siegfried (2026), New directions in mapping ice sheet fabrics and flow, Eos, 107, https://doi.org/10.1029/2026EO260154. Published on 14 May 2026.
When we picture the effects of melting glaciers, many of us think of rising seas and retreating ice streams. But along Greenland’s coastline, a quieter transformation is underway, one that is affecting how the ocean breathes and how it reacts to and buffers itself against change.
In Young Sound, a fjord carved into Greenland’s remote northeastern coast, decades of monitoring have revealed that glacial meltwater does not simply dilute the salt in seawater. As fresh water enters the ocean, it
When we picture the effects of melting glaciers, many of us think of rising seas and retreating ice streams. But along Greenland’s coastline, a quieter transformation is underway, one that is affecting how the ocean breathes and how it reacts to and buffers itself against change.
In Young Sound, a fjord carved into Greenland’s remote northeastern coast, decades of monitoring have revealed that glacial meltwater does not simply dilute the salt in seawater. As fresh water enters the ocean, it weakens the ocean’s natural chemical resistance to swings in acidity. This so-called buffering capacity keeps seawater pH in balance. The loss of buffering due to freshwater runoff leaves these coastal waters unusually sensitive to even small biological and environmental shifts.
Atmospheric warming is accelerating fastest in the Arctic, and with it come longer glacial melt seasons and increased freshwater runoff. The result is a coastal ocean that is both a frontline witness to climate change and a laboratory for understanding how the chemistry of the seas can change in unexpected ways.
The Ocean’s Chemical Safety Net
Seawater chemistry is naturally buffered by dissolved ions that act as chemical shock absorbers.
Globally, the ocean absorbs about a quarter of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions each year. That uptake helps to slow climate change, but at a cost. The more CO2 that water absorbs, the more acidic it becomes. Thankfully, seawater chemistry is naturally buffered by dissolved ions—particularly carbonate, bicarbonate, and hydroxide—that act as chemical shock absorbers. These negatively charged ions, collectively called alkalinity, bind to the positive hydrogen ions released when carbonic acid forms, keeping the ocean’s pH relatively stable compared with the more variable conditions in freshwater rivers and lakes.
The polar oceans play a special role in this balance and in the global carbon cycle because cold waters at high latitudes take up carbon from the atmosphere faster than warm tropical waters. Yet these regions are also changing the most rapidly.
When Meltwater Meets the Sea
For 20 years, our team at Aarhus University has measured salinity, temperature, and carbon chemistry in Young Sound. Each August, we make the 2-day journey to northeast Greenland, where we spend the month sailing down the 90-kilometer-long fjord to capture these valuable measurements (Figure 1).
Fig. 1. The red line, running from the Greenland Ice Sheet (y) to the Greenland Sea (z), maps the route taken by researchers in August 2023 during their annual transect of Young Sound in northeast Greenland. Credit: Adapted from Henson et al., 2025, https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02685-4, CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
During the time we have monitored this ecosystem, the melt season has lengthened, with sea ice–free conditions now lasting 8 days longer than 20 years ago. Glaciers feeding the fjord are also thinning and retreating, discharging about 5.5 million cubic meters more water into the fjord each year. These changes have freshened the coastal ocean and subtly, but significantly, altered its chemistry.
Fjords like these have long been known as major CO2 sinks. Surface waters near glaciers often have very low CO2 concentrations, creating a disequilibrium between CO2 levels in the surface ocean and the atmosphere that draws carbon out of the air. But how or why these glacial ecosystems act as carbon sinks and what mechanisms are at play haven’t been thoroughly described. We have also been deeply curious about what else happens when fresh water enters the sea. What are the hidden consequences of this change?
To find out, we paired our long-term field observations with controlled lab experiments in which we mixed glacial meltwater with seawater. Controlled experiments allow us to dig into the nuances of chemical changes that are impossible to measure in the field. We also ran mixing models that allowed us to estimate how the chemistry of those mixed waters responds to small shifts in biological activity or mineral interactions.
The results were striking. When meltwater mixes with seawater, it not only reduces salinity but also dilutes alkalinity, the measure of how well water can neutralize acid and buffer against pH change. This weakening of buffering capacity means that even small changes in photosynthesis or respiration can drive much larger swings in CO2 uptake and acidity than they would in more saline waters.
Two researchers wade into a meltwater river in Tyrolerfjord in Northeast Greenland National Park in 2023 to collect samples bearing the chemical fingerprints of climate change in the region. Credit: Henry C. Henson
We found that in the freshened waters of Young Sound, these processes have 2–3 times the influence on carbon uptake that they do farther out at sea. In effect, meltwater primes the coastal ocean to overreact, amplifying any ecosystem changes that might occur.
Measurements from around Greenland show that this is not just a theoretical risk. Surface waters are measurably more acidic where meltwater inputs are high. The biological consequences of this trend are still uncertain, but species living at the edge of their tolerance, such as shell-forming plankton and Arctic cod larvae, could face growing stress as the chemistry of their habitat fluctuates more widely.
A Fragile Balance in the Freshening Arctic
The findings confirm that fjords absorb carbon as a result of biological activity and glacial input but indicate that they do so in a fragile, easily tipped state.
Our study adds nuance to conventional perceptions of carbon cycling in fjords, long seen as places where atmospheric CO2 is drawn down. The findings confirm that fjords absorb carbon as a result of biological activity and glacial input but indicate that they do so in a fragile, easily tipped state. Slight shifts in the processes that pull CO2 out of the air could tip the scales in either direction: toward even more uptake and the accompanying acidification or toward a release of CO2 to the atmosphere.
This chemical sensitivity explains why Arctic fjords can show such strong seasonal and spatial swings in carbon chemistry and why predicting their long-term role in the carbon cycle is difficult. As glaciers retreat and meltwater inputs grow, those sensitivities are likely to intensify.
At first glance, changes in how seawater in the narrow, remote fjords of Greenland reacts to glacial melt might sound like a local concern. But the chemical processes at play have global resonance.
A tongue of the Greenland Ice Sheet retreats along the tundra as temperatures across the Arctic warm. Credit: Henry C. Henson
Ridges in the Greenland Ice Sheet tell a story of movement and melt. Credit: Henry C. Henson
Glacial meltwater from the Greenland Ice sheet flows into Tyrolerfjord and Young Sound and in Northeast Greenland National Park in August 2023. Credit: Henry C. Henson
The Arctic Ocean as a whole is freshening, driven by accelerating ice melt as well as by increasing river discharge and changing weather bringing more precipitation to the region. Although river water, which arrives from the six great Arctic rivers of North America and Eurasia, is more alkaline than glacial melt, its alkalinity is only about half that of seawater. In other words, river runoff also increases the ocean’s chemical sensitivity. Fresh water also delivers organic matter from permafrost, fine sediments from glaciers, and tannin-rich runoff from tundra soils, each of which can influence carbon cycling and further compound changes already underway.
Similar patterns of increased rainfall and runoff reducing surface salinity are emerging around the Antarctic Peninsula, the Gulf of Alaska, and the North Atlantic. Almost everywhere that fresh water enters the ocean, it lowers alkalinity and limits the ocean’s ability to buffer change.
A Window into Climate Intervention
Our results also carry lessons for researchers and companies contemplating ocean chemistry interventions as ways to remove CO2 from the atmosphere. One proposed approach, ocean alkalinity enhancement, involves adding crushed minerals such as lime, olivine, and basalt to seawater to both counteract acidification and increase the ocean’s capacity to take up CO2.
Glacial systems already perform a natural version of this experiment by grinding rock into fine sediment and discharging it into the ocean. Minerals in this sediment react with seawater and shape its carbon chemistry.
Our study suggests that such reactions are especially potent in freshwater-influenced coastal regions, where reduced buffering capacity may amplify chemical responses not only from natural biological processes but also from potential human attempts to alter seawater chemistry. Thus, understanding the balance between carbon uptake and chemical vulnerability will be essential before any large-scale interventions are attempted.
Consequences Locally and Globally
Coastal communities from Greenland to Alaska to northern Eurasia depend on Arctic waters as part of their cultural identity and, by way of fisheries and tourism, for their economic and food security. As chemical buffering capacity declines, coastal ecosystems may become more susceptible to acidification and other environmental stresses. Small changes in temperature, ecosystem metabolism, or nutrient inputs could then have outsized effects on the marine life that supports these communities.
As coastal glaciers retreat and meltwater rivers carve new paths to the sea, they are doing more than raising sea level and reshaping coastlines. They are rewiring ocean chemistry.
At the same time, changing conditions in coastal Arctic ocean regions complicate scientific modeling of carbon cycling and climate feedbacks, which typically relies on averaged estimates of the ocean’s chemical reactivity. With meltwater making the coastal ocean more reactive, these seas may absorb or release CO2 more variably than how global predictions would suggest. In addition to the real effects on local ecosystems, seawater chemical variability could also affect the accuracy of modeled global carbon budgets, which we use to inform future climate projections and guide international policy goals.
As coastal glaciers retreat and meltwater rivers carve new paths to the sea, they are doing more than raising sea level and reshaping coastlines. They are rewiring ocean chemistry, leaving it fresher and more easily disturbed.
The chemical sensitivity we see in Greenland’s fjords today may be a preview of what is to come in many coastal regions. If so, then we must be concerned with not only how much CO2 the ocean can absorb but also how stably it can hold that CO2 in a rapidly changing world.
Author Information
Henry C. Henson (hch@ecos.au.dk), Aarhus University, Denmark
Citation: Henson, H. C. (2026), Melting glaciers make the coastal ocean more sensitive, Eos, 107, https://doi.org/10.1029/2026EO260116. Published on 16 April 2026.
Tiny saltwater channels have a big influence on sea ice.
Sea ice typically includes pockets or channels of brine that allow salt water to flow vertically through the ice. When those channels align neatly, they need to make up only about 5% of the ice volume before the water can flow. But in more disordered, granular ice, salt water starts to flow only when the brine channels take up more space—roughly 10% of the ice volume, according to a new study published in Scientific Reports.
“If we’
Tiny saltwater channels have a big influence on sea ice.
Sea ice typically includes pockets or channels of brine that allow salt water to flow vertically through the ice. When those channels align neatly, they need to make up only about 5% of the ice volume before the water can flow. But in more disordered, granular ice, salt water starts to flow only when the brine channels take up more space—roughly 10% of the ice volume, according to a new study published in Scientific Reports.
“If we’re trying to find predictive models about how these ice cores are responding under climate change, it’s going to be necessary to take into account these structural and microstructural conditions.”
This higher threshold could slow the drainage of surface melt ponds, as well as the transport of nutrients to microbial communities inside the ice.
“If we’re trying to find predictive models about how these ice cores are responding under climate change, it’s going to be necessary to take into account these structural and microstructural conditions,” said Stephen Ackley, a sea ice researcher at the University of Texas at San Antonio who was not involved in the study.
Disorderly Constructs
As seawater freezes, it forms a mixture of ice crystals and brine. In calm conditions, the ice slowly grows into long, parallel crystals separated by orderly brine channels. This columnar sea ice is common in the Arctic, and its properties have been widely used in sea ice models.
But in choppy waves or when the ice’s snow-covered surface floods and refreezes, new ice can’t grow into these ordered columns. Instead, it forms small, randomly oriented grains separated by more complex pores containing brine and gases. Called granular ice, this form is more common in Antarctica but is becoming increasingly prevalent in the Arctic as temperatures rise and ice cover thins.
“It’s the sequel we’ve been waiting decades for.”
In 1998, University of Utah mathematician Kenneth Golden established the first estimate of the point at which the brine channels are connected enough to allow water to flow in columnar ice, called the percolation threshold. The new work, also led by Golden, extends a similar analysis to granular sea ice.
“It’s the sequel we’ve been waiting decades for,” said Don Perovich, a sea ice researcher at Dartmouth who was not involved in the new work.
To quantify the percolation threshold for granular ice, Golden and his colleagues collected sea ice samples during two expeditions off the eastern coast of Antarctica in 2007 and 2012. They measured how quickly water moved through the brine channels in the ice. After the 2012 expedition, they also mapped the arrangement of ice crystals within the ice blocks to correlate those permeability measurements with the microscale structure of the ice.
Most climate models are based on the assumption that the microstructure of sea ice is organized into columns, like those in the image on the left. But new research shows that granular ice, as seen on the right, is growing more common in the Arctic, which could affect climate modeling. Credit: Golden et al., 2026, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-026-41706-w, CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
The finding that in granular ice, about twice as much of the ice volume needs to be brine for water to flow compared to columnar ice suggests that brine channels within granular ice are much less interconnected.
With the higher threshold, “you have to reassess all these models, anything that relies on fluid flow through sea ice,” if granular ice is present, said Golden. Granular ice will require warmer or saltier conditions to leave enough brine in the ice structure to meet the percolation threshold and allow water to flow vertically.
Researchers extracted blocks of ice in Antarctica with a chainsaw and poured dyed salt water on top. In this way, they observed how quickly the fluid descended through the ice. Credit: Kenneth Golden
For example, the new value could influence models of how meltwater ponds behave atop an underlying ice sheet. If meltwater ponds form above a base of granular sea ice, those ponds will require warmer temperatures before they start draining than melt ponds on columnar ice will.
If these melt ponds remain on the surface longer waiting for those warmer temperatures, they could lower the albedo, or reflectivity, of the ice sheet. That could cause the ice sheet to absorb more heat, leading to a feedback loop that could accelerate melting.
The higher percolation threshold could also affect algae that lives within the ice. Ice algae make up an important food source for krill and crustaceans, which in turn become food for fish, penguins, and whales. Algae rely on water flowing through the ice to deliver nutrients. Because granular ice requires warmer temperatures for that flow to start, it could affect the depth at which algae can live inside the ice, Golden said.
Percolation Consideration
Still, experts say more data are needed to establish percolation thresholds across both Arctic and Antarctic ice. The size of the grains in granular ice can vary substantially at different temperatures, under different formation conditions, and between the poles. Larger grains could lower the percolation threshold, allowing water to flow even when the ice contains much less than 10% brine by volume, said Sønke Maus, a scientist studying ice microstructure at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology who was not involved in the study.
“The data that we have at the moment for the granular sea ice is sparse,” Maus said. “You need a big campaign to collect such data.”
Golden said that in future work he also plans to develop models to compute the electromagnetic properties of both columnar and granular sea ice. Knowing these properties can help scientists determine the thickness and age of an ice sheet from satellite data.
Citation: Ware, S. (2026), Changes in sea ice microstructure could affect climate models, Eos, 107, https://doi.org/10.1029/2026EO260164. Published on 20 May 2026.
In the early morning of 10 August 2025, a mountainside collapsed into the waters of Tracy Arm Fjord in southeastern Alaska.
This massive landslide produced a tsunami that reached 481 meters on the opposite side of the fjord—higher than all but the world’s 14 tallest buildings—and registered on seismic detectors around the globe. For days after the slope collapsed, the waters of the fjord churned with a standing wave known as a seiche.
This drone video shows a man paddling throu
This massive landslide produced a tsunami that reached 481 meters on the opposite side of the fjord—higher than all but the world’s 14 tallest buildings—and registered on seismic detectors around the globe. For days after the slope collapsed, the waters of the fjord churned with a standing wave known as a seiche.
This drone video shows a man paddling through the iceberg-filled Tracy arm fjord in the aftermath of a landslide. Credit: Bill Billmeier
This event was the second-largest tsunami ever recorded and the largest not linked to an earthquake. A new paper published in Science presented strong evidence that the Tracy Arm landslide was instead the result of the rapid retreat of South Sawyer Glacier, itself a consequence of global climate change.
“It’s like if you have a kid and they said they cleaned their room but really all they did was throw everything in the closet. As soon as you open that door, everything falls out.”
Nobody was harmed by the rockslide or tsunami, but cruise ships were scheduled to visit the fjord later that morning. If the collapse had happened just a few hours later, it could have been disastrous.
“While the [South Sawyer] Glacier is in the fjord, it’s supporting those valley walls, like the buttresses on a cathedral,” said Daniel Shugar, a geomorphologist at the University of Calgary who led the study. “As that glacier retreated over the last few decades, it retreated just past the spot that did fail. It’s like if you have a kid and they said they cleaned their room but really all they did was throw everything in the closet. As soon as you open that door, everything falls out.”
This animation shows an overhead view of the 10 August 2025 Tracy Arm landslide. Credit: Patrick Lynett, University of Southern California
In other words, the glacier that carved the fjord in the first place was also holding its slopes in place, and the ice’s retreat under warming temperatures exposed rock that became vulnerable to crumbling. The proximate cause of the landslide might have been something else—as Shugar noted, rainfall is plentiful in that part of Alaska, which could have weakened the fjord’s walls further—but it might also have been a combination of small, individually insignificant factors. In any case, the removal of that glacial “closet door” was what made the collapse and tsunami possible.
“We know that steep slopes are very sensitive to the things that climate [change] is exacerbating, whether it’s losing permafrost, glacier retreating, or more water in the soil,” said glaciologist Leigh Stearns of the University of Pennsylvania, who was not involved with the Tracy Arm study. “Often, we think of glacier retreat as a long and continuous thing, but [it] can trigger sudden catastrophic events.”
This aerial photo shows the highest run-up resulting from the 10 August 2025 landslide-triggered tsunami in Tracy Arm. It was captured during a U.S. Geological Survey field reconnaissance overflight on 13 August 2025. Credit: John Lyons/U.S. Geological Survey.
The Tracy Arm tsunami, like the record-setting Lituya Bay 524-meter megatsunami in 1958, was so dramatic in part because it happened in a fjord. The steep sides of the relatively narrow channel concentrated the energy generated by the rockfall into water.
A drone video shows the tsunami-affected part of the fjord, including the highest run-up area and the landslide itself. Credit: Bill Billmeier
Unlike Lituya Bay, which resulted from an earthquake, Tracy Arm provided very little seismic warning before the slope collapsed, requiring forensic work to determine what caused it.
Shugar noted that South Sawyer Glacier had retreated by roughly 500 meters in the spring of 2025 alone, on top of the general trend of shrinking and thinning over the decades. And it’s not alone: Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR) images taken by satellites indicate that many slopes in Alaska and beyond are in motion, pointing to potential future danger.
“Not every single one, but it seems like a huge majority of [shifting slopes] are above the lower parts of thinning glaciers,” Shugar said. He described this phenomenon as “debuttressing,” as in losing the glacial buttress holding a slope up. He added, “I think in the next 5 years or so, we’ll probably have a much better understanding of just how and how quickly slopes respond to that debuttressing.”
Threats, Hazards, and Climate Change
“We were unbelievably lucky that the [tsunami] occurred with the timing that it did, and not 5 hours later.”
Most tsunamis are set in motion by earthquakes and travel across the open ocean, wreaking their destruction when they reach shallower water near coasts; the word “tsunami” means “harbor wave” in Japanese. The Tracy Arm tsunami joined the ranks of other landslide-driven tsunamis, like the ones in Taan Fiord (Alaska) and Dixon Fjord (Greenland), in being linked to human-driven climate change. Beyond the immediate impact of the waves, this category of hazard requires rethinking potential risks from abrupt catastrophes like debuttressing as well as slower effects such as sea level rise.
“The risk to any particular cruise ship [from a tsunami] on any particular day is very low,” Shugar said. “We were unbelievably lucky that the [tsunami] occurred with the timing that it did, and not 5 hours later. The risk certainly still could be increasing as we build new settlements, new mining camps, or new oil and gas infrastructure.”
Both Shugar and Stearns highlighted the importance of learning lessons from Tracy Arm and related events.
“Climate is a threat multiplier, and the research is really forcing us to look at these cascading hazards,” Stearns said. Tracy Arm “is one example of this: Small slow changes can trigger big events. Hopefully, we don’t need so many disasters to spur some change.”
A drone video shows Sawyer Island in the Tracy Arm Fjord and evidence of the tsunami on the fjord walls. Credit: Bill Billmeier
This aerial photo shows the north side of Alaska’s Tracy Arm Fjord in the aftermath of the 2025 landslide and tsunami. The lighter-colored rock is the exposed surface, where the mountainside collapsed and fell into the water. The foot of South Sawyer Glacier is visible at lower right; in decades past, the ice extended much farther and was thick enough to hold the rock slopes in place. Credit: Cyrus Read/U.S. Geological Survey
Editors’ Highlights are summaries of recent papers by AGU’s journal editors.
Source: Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
Glacier ice is a crystalline material that flows across the Earth’s surface and is often close to the pressure-melting point. The way ice deforms is therefore an interplay of many factors including the temperature, grain size, and purity of the ice. Numerical models of ice flow are based on the Glen-Nye flow law (Glen’s Law)—a simple relationship between stre
Source: Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface
Glacier ice is a crystalline material that flows across the Earth’s surface and is often close to the pressure-melting point. The way ice deforms is therefore an interplay of many factors including the temperature, grain size, and purity of the ice. Numerical models of ice flow are based on the Glen-Nye flow law (Glen’s Law)—a simple relationship between stress and strain in ice developed by John Glen and John Nye from laboratory experiments in the 1950s. Glen’s Law derives strain (creep, or deformation flow of ice) from the applied stress raised to the power of the exponent n, multiplied by the temperature-dependent constant A. The values for these parameters are empirical, and both linear and power-law forms of Glen’s Law have been proposed, although a value of 3 is typically used for n.
Lilien et al. [2026] use a flowline model to explore the impact of the choice of value for Glen’s n on the outcome of projections of ice sheet mass change, considering different values for A and different glacier sliding laws. They found that the relationship between n and glacier mass loss is complicated and varies depending on glacier type. For dynamically controlled glaciers, increasing n increased mass loss, as ice flowed more rapidly into ablation areas. For surface mass balance-controlled glaciers, increasing n decreased mass loss, because ice flux decreased at the equilibrium line. The authors find that using a single value for Glen’s n is likely to lead to large uncertainties in projections of ice sheet change, and therefore studies of future ice sheet mass loss need to consider how the flow-law exponent varies spatially.
Citation: Lilien, D. A., Ranganathan, M., & Shapero, D. R. (2026). Effect of the flow-law exponent on ice-stream sensitivity to melt. Journal of Geophysical Research: Earth Surface,131, e2025JF008726. https://doi.org/10.1029/2025JF008726
Source: AGU Advances
As meltwater drains through and beneath a glacier, it can alter how the ice flows and whether it breaks apart. Meltwater can also cause feedbacks that lead to more ice loss. Understanding when and how glacial meltwater drains is therefore critical to predicting how fast glaciers will lose ice and how that loss will affect sea level.
Chudley et al. modeled how the rate of water flowing into a glacier relates to seasonal changes in the forces that squeeze and stretch ic
As meltwater drains through and beneath a glacier, it can alter how the ice flows and whether it breaks apart. Meltwater can also cause feedbacks that lead to more ice loss. Understanding when and how glacial meltwater drains is therefore critical to predicting how fast glaciers will lose ice and how that loss will affect sea level.
Chudleyet al. modeled how the rate of water flowing into a glacier relates to seasonal changes in the forces that squeeze and stretch ice—forces caused by gravity pulling the glacier downhill, by the ice sliding over subglacial water, and by how portions of the ice interact with the ocean.
The researchers focused on the Sermeq Kujalleq glacier (also known as Store Gletsjer or Store Glacier) in Greenland. In spring, meltwater can fill cracks, or crevasses, that run through the surface of this glacier. These crevasses sometimes go on to drain as the year progresses.
The researchers used satellite imagery from the Sentinel-2 mission to see how much water was present in crevasses between 2016 and 2022, focusing especially on 2019, when the Sentinel-2 satellites provided the best coverage of the glacier. They fed those data into a convolutional neural network to map water cover through the season and looked for a relationship between the mechanical forces acting on the ice and the formation and drainage of crevasse ponds.
The researchers found that the mechanical forces acting on ice are the dominant factor in determining when crevasse meltwater drains into a glacier. When seasonal changes cause ice to stretch, crevasses can drain suddenly, releasing the water they held.
The Greenland Ice Sheet sheds trillions of gallons of water each year, and knowing when to expect that water to drain through the ice sheet is key to understanding processes such as how the glacier slides across the bed and when meltwater emerges in the ocean. The study’s results likely also shed light on dynamic processes in other glaciers and ice sheets, the authors say, and should help inform representations of ice behavior in numerical models. (AGU Advances, https://doi.org/10.1029/2025AV002150, 2026)
Citation: Sidik, S. M. (2026), Stretching and squeezing release glacial meltwater, Eos, 107, https://doi.org/10.1029/2026EO260152. Published on 26 May 2026.