Open-access Retreat of Greenwich, Livingston, Robert and Snow Islands glaciers, Antarctica, between 1956 and 2023

Abstract

Glaciers are sensitive to environmental climatic conditions and show their variability over time. This study investigates the environmental characteristics and variation in glacial cover of the Greenwich, Livingston, Robert and Snow islands, Antarctica, between 1956 and 2023. The glacier extension mapping was based on visual interpretation of the Landsat 4, 7 and 8 optical images and normalised difference indexes combination. The REMA 8 digital elevation model was applied to the islands’ geomorphometric analysis. Results were compared to climatic series and environmental characteristics. The glacial coverage decreased by 16.9% from 1956 to 2023, equivalent to 209.95 ± 0.113 km². Snow Island, with shallow bathymetry near glacial margins and land-terminating ice-fronts, exhibited the smallest retreat rate values. The glacial coverage of Livingston Island decreased significantly (18%, equivalent to 153.2 ± 0.113 km²) from 1956-2021, representing the highest values in the study. The changes in glacial coverage of the Robert and Greenwich islands were more substantial in the 1989-2023 period than in 1956-1989. Sectors with marine-terminating glaciers, associated with high bathymetric amplitudes, exhibited more significant variations compared to other sectors, contributing to the evolution of fjord-type bays. Glacial coverage has been lost in recent decades due to regional atmospheric and oceanic warming.

Key words
retreat; maritime antarctic region; optical sensors; Landsat; spectral index; spatial temporal analysis

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