“…Quantitative assessments of the present and future rate of discharge are significant for understanding changes in global sea level (e.g., Shepherd et al, 2012;Church et al, 2013), ocean circulation (Driesschaert et al, 2007), and ocean productivity (Frajka-Williams and Rhines, 2010). It is thought that in recent years changes in the rate of GrIS iceberg calving and meltwater runoff have been making roughly equal contributions to global sea level rise (Rignot et al, 2008;van den Broeke et al, 2009;Fürst et al, 2015), but that runoff is becoming the dominant process for mass loss Enderlin et al, 2014).…”