Glaciers in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago (CAA) contribute significantly to sea-level rise, yet sparse in situ data limit regional climate assessments. This study presents the first decadal (2013–2024) satellite-derived time series of late-summer snowline altitude (SLA) for six CAA glaciers, utilising 9920 Landsat 8/9 and Sentinel-2 scenes. Glacier surface cover types (snow and bare ice) were mapped via machine learning, and SLA was extracted using elevation-binning and Snow-Elevation Histogram Analysis (SEHA). Elevation data were obtained from ArcticDEM v3; positive degree days (PDD) from Eureka, Pond Inlet, and Pangnirtung were used to characterize melt-season forcing. Satellite-derived SLA was validated against equilibrium-line altitude (ELA) observations from White Glacier. All glaciers exhibit a characteristic seasonal SCA cycle: maximum extent in June, minimum in August, and partial recovery in September, with extreme anomalies in 2020. Annual peak SLA correlates positively with summer warmth; sensitivities to PDD were 2.56, 0.67, and 0.83 m (°C d)−1 for White, Highway, and Turner glaciers, respectively. Hypsometry strongly modulates climatic sensitivity: glaciers with limited high-elevation area (e.g., BylotD20s, Turner) frequently lose their accumulation zones in warm years. At White Glacier, SLA replicates interannual ELA variability with high correlation and lower error using the elevation-bin method (mean bias +53 m; RMSE 177 m) compared with SEHA (+165 m; 339 m). Meteorological records indicate significant summer and winter warming at Eureka, with increasing PDD; precipitation trends are spatially variable. A regionally calibrated, quality-assured elevation-bin method produces objective and transferable SLA time series, suitable for ELA estimation in data-sparse Arctic settings. The SLA–PDD relationship and hypsometry-dependent responses highlight increasing stress on accumulation zones under continued warming. Reporting SLA uncertainty and image quality, alongside expanded field observations, will enhance Arctic-wide glacier monitoring.
Cheung et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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