Hi All

I hope that this will be interesting.  For a month either side of the summer 
solstice there is more heat going into the North pole than the equator.

Stephen Salter
Emeritus Professor of Engineering Design
School of Engineering
Mayfield Road
Edinburgh EH9 3DW
0131 650 5704
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o-0h14RFq4M&t=155s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBB6WtH_Ni8


From: Richard Tabony <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, January 7, 2022 10:20 AM
To: Richard Tabony <[email protected]>
Subject: RMetS meeting on Friday 14th January

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ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, SCOTTISH CENTRE



VIRTUAL MEETING, 6 PM FRIDAY 14 JANUARY



ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES AND THEIR IMPACT ON THE 79° NORTH GLACIER, NORTHEAST 
GREENLAND



DR JENNY TURTON, SENIOR ADVISOR, ARCTIC FRONTIERS

FORMERLY

FRIEDRICH-ALEXANDER UNIVERSITAT, ERLANGEN, GERMANY





SPEAKER



My research focuses on the interaction between the atmosphere and cryosphere in 
the polar regions and mountains. More specifically, I investigate the spatial 
distribution, frequency and impact of atmospheric processes on surface melting 
of glaciers and ice shelves. So far, I have focused on the Larsen C ice shelf, 
79N glacier (northeast Greenland) and the Patagonian ice fields.

I am passionate about science communication and regularly participate in and 
organise workshops, events and lectures for a variety of audiences. Most 
recently, I participated in the ‘long night of science’ at Friedrich Alexander 
University and spoke with journalists and radio hosts about climate change in 
the Arctic.

I started my position at Arctic Frontiers on 1st January. This is an 
organisation which creates dialogues between scientists, policy makers, 
governments and local communities in the Arctic. From April 2019 to April 2021 
I was the Early Career Scientist (ECS) representative for the cryosphere 
division of the European Geosciences Union (EGU). As part of this role, I 
communicate the needs and voices of the division with council members of the 
union. I have organised webinars on careers outside of academia and chaired a 
debate focusing on the balance between conducting science and reducing our 
carbon footprint.

In August 2017 I defended my PhD on the spatial and temporal distribution of 
föhn winds and their impact on the Larsen C Ice Shelf, Antarctica. I studied 
for my PhD jointly with the British Antarctic Survey and the University of 
Leeds.





ABSTRACT



Nioghalvfjerdsfjorden or 79° North Glacier drains approximately 8% of the 
Greenland ice stream and is the largest remaining ice shelf in the Arctic. 
Since the mid 2000's, the glacier has been thinning, retreating and melting at 
a faster rate. In 2019 and 2020, two large icebergs calved following 
exceptionally warm summers. The glacier has a floating tongue, which extends 
approximately 80km into the ocean, which means the glacier is exposed to both a 
warming ocean and a warming atmosphere. During winter, the passing of storms 
along the coast can raise the air temperature to the melting point and produce 
rainfall. In winter, atmospheric rivers pass over the ice sheet and produce 
extreme melting through the föhn mechanism. Recent evidence suggests that 
melting is now occurring at a higher elevation than in the early 2000's. In 
this talk, the key atmospheric processes in the region will be presented, along 
with a discussion of the impact they are having on the glacier through enhanced 
ice melting.





This will be a 45 minute talk followed by 15 minutes for Q&A. The meeting will 
open from 5:50 pm for attendees to join and the event will start promptly at 6 
pm. Please register for the event on www.rmets.org<http://www.rmets.org/> and 
join the meeting using Google Chrome. Please note that joining instructions 
will not be provided unless you have registered.

The University of Edinburgh is a charitable body, registered in Scotland, with 
registration number SC005336. Is e buidheann carthannais a th’ ann an Oilthigh 
Dhùn Èideann, clàraichte an Alba, àireamh clàraidh SC005336.

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