New assessment shows gain of coastline from receding glaciers

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
April 8, 2025

Map showing new coastline from receding McBride Glacier
Image courtesy of Jan Kavan
Recent retreat of McBride Glacier in 黑料社apphas led to exposure of 5.25 miles of coastline, shown in green in this false color Sentinel-2 satellite image.

New research gives a detailed look at the extent to which receding glaciers in Alaska and elsewhere in the Northern Hemisphere are creating new coastline and how that newly exposed terrain is behaving.

The work was led by Jan Kavan of the University of South Bohemia in Czechia. The five co-authors include research assistant professor Louise Farquharson of the 黑料社app Geophysical Institute.

鈥淩eceding glaciers are creating extensive sections of new coastline and islands across the Arctic,鈥 Farquharson said. 鈥淗ow permafrost is forming in areas that are cold enough is poorly understood, as well as the interaction between areas of new permafrost and the coastal geomorphology.鈥

The researchers studied marine-terminating glaciers across the Northern Hemisphere to determine the length of new coastline exposed by glacial retreat from 2000 to 2020. Findings were published March 21 in .

The team found 1,530 miles of new coastline, with two-thirds of that occurring in Greenland, the largest Arctic region and the region with the greatest extent of glacier coverage.

The northern Canadian Arctic, Russian Arctic and Svalbard each had 135 to 150 miles of new coastline, together accounting for nearly 30% of the total. The remaining portion was found in Alaska, the southern Canadian Arctic and Iceland.

黑料社appgained several miles of coastline, with the retreat of McBride Glacier in Southeast 黑料社appaccounting for 5.25 miles of the total.

鈥淭he glaciers in 黑料社appare mostly in narrow, steep fjords, so even a small area loss means a long retreat and therefore a long stretch of new coastline,鈥 Kavan said.

Greenland has the most glacier acreage but doesn鈥檛 produce the most coastline per acre of ice lost, the researchers also found, due to the geometry of the tidal glaciers there. After adjusting data for a correct comparison, the researchers found that 黑料社appand Arctic Canada South, a region that includes Baffin Island, are the most effective regions in forming new coastline.

Retreating glacier in Svalbard
Photo courtesy of Jan Kavan
Svalbard: The terminus of the Recherchebreen glacier retreats in an ocean arm in Norway鈥檚 Svalbard archipelago.

The researchers found that the most dramatic retreat and new coast emergence resulted from the collapse of ice shelves or the floating portion of a marine-terminating glacier. They determined that the ratio of new coastline to glacier retreat area is tightly connected to local topography. A glacier that extends into the open sea could experience extensive retreat without any new coastline formation, the authors note.

New coastline can present hazards.

鈥淭he newly deglaciated coastal zones are prone to slope destabilization and resulting landslides and rockfalls with consequent tsunami waves,鈥 Kavan said. 鈥淭hese waves can destroy infrastructure and threaten onshore settlements.鈥

Farquharson, a permafrost expert, noted that the formation, presence or absence of permafrost in newly exposed coastline is a critical influence on coastal landforms and erodibility.

Kavan said that the new coastline detailed in the research affects only a small number of communities but that the occurrence is significant when considered in a global climate context.

鈥淭he Arctic and its cryosphere is a key component of the global climate system, which in the end affects all of us,鈥 he said. 鈥淯nderstanding the behavior of the Arctic glaciers can help us to better predict future climate development and help us to prepare how to face the consequences of climate change.鈥

ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Louise Farquharson, 907-474-5623, lmfarquharson@alaska.edu; Jan Kavan, kavan@prf.jcu.cz

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