Heilprin Glacier
Heilprin Glacier (Danish: Heilprin Gletscher), is a glacier in northwestern Greenland.[2] Administratively it belongs to the Avannaata municipality.
Heilprin Glacier | |
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Heilprin Gletscher | |
Location within Greenland | |
Type | Tidal outlet glacier |
Location | Greenland |
Coordinates | 77°31′N 65°40′W |
Width | 8 km (5.0 mi) |
Terminus | Inglefield Fjord Baffin Bay |
Status | Retreating[1] |
This glacier was named by Robert Peary after geologist, paleontologist and naturalist Angelo Heilprin (1853 – 1907), curator of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences, who took part in the Peary expedition to Greenland of 1891–92.[3]
Geography
The Heilprin Glacier discharges from the Greenland Ice Sheet into the head of the Inglefield Fjord just east of the Harvard Islands and northeast of Quajaqqisaarsuaq. Its terminus lies between the Smithson Range nunatak that separates it from the Tracy Glacier to the north, and Nunatarsuaq, a plateau dotted with lakes to the south.[2] Both neighboring glaciers drain roughly 12,000 km2 (4,600 sq mi) of the Greenland Ice Sheet.[1]
Although the Heilprin Glacier is contiguous to the Tracy Glacier, both glaciers have a different nature, a fact which has been a source of puzzlement for scientists for over a century.[4]
References
- Heilprin Glacier, NW Greenland Pinning Point Decline 1987-2017
- "Heilprin Gletscher". Mapcarta. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
- Robert Neff Keely, Gwilym George Davis, In Arctic Seas: the Voyage of the Kite with the Peary Expedition, 2011 p. 373
- "NASA Discovered Why Greenland's Glaciers Are Melting at Different Speeds". Inverse. Retrieved 30 March 2019.
External links
- NASA - Decline of Two Glaciers in Northwest Greenland
- Identifying Spatial Variability in Greenland's Outlet Glacier Response to Ocean Heat
- The recent regimen of the ice cap margin in North Greenland