Unveiling a Hidden Network: 37 Subglacial Lakes Discovered Beneath Canadian Arctic Glaciers
In a landmark achievement for cryospheric sciences, researchers from the University of Ottawa have led the first comprehensive mapping of subglacial lakes beneath glaciers in Canada's Arctic. Published in The Cryosphere in early 2026, the study identifies 37 active subglacial lakes, with 35 previously unknown. These bodies of water, lurking hundreds of meters under thick ice, play a pivotal role in glacier dynamics and contribute to our understanding of accelerating ice loss amid climate change.
The Canadian Arctic Archipelago (CAA) hosts over 25,000 glaciers outside the major ice sheets, making it a critical region for global sea level rise monitoring. Unlike the well-studied subglacial lakes under Antarctica's and Greenland's vast ice sheets, those beneath peripheral glaciers like those in the CAA have remained largely invisible until now. This University of Ottawa-led effort highlights Canada's academic prowess in remote sensing and glaciology.
Led by graduate researcher W. Zheng under the supervision of Professor Luke Copland, the team used decade-long satellite data to detect subtle surface elevation changes signaling lake fill-drain cycles. This discovery not only fills a major gap in Arctic hydrology knowledge but also underscores the vital contributions of Canadian universities to international climate research.
The Innovative Mapping Techniques Behind the Discovery
The study's methodology represents a sophisticated application of remote sensing technology, drawing on high-resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) from NASA's ICESat-2 mission spanning 2018 to 2022, supplemented by earlier ICESat data from 2011. By applying linear regression analysis to repeat-track surface elevation profiles, the researchers pinpointed anomalous patterns indicative of subglacial water movement.
Subglacial lakes (full form: subglacial lakes, SGLs) cause measurable ice surface uplift when filling and subsidence when draining, typically over months to years. The team classified lakes into three categories: classic SGLs under the main glacier body, terminal SGLs at confluences where two glaciers meet, and medial SGLs along medial moraines. Lake areas range from 0.3 to 48.5 square kilometers, with volume fluctuations up to 2 cubic kilometers in the largest.
This approach builds on techniques refined at the University of Ottawa's Laboratory for Cryospheric Research, where Professor Copland's team has pioneered glacier monitoring in the High Arctic. Their work demonstrates how Canadian institutions are at the forefront of leveraging satellite altimetry for inaccessible terrains.

The map produced marks the first inventory of its kind for non-ice-sheet glaciers in the CAA, revealing interconnected hydrological networks that channel meltwater to the ocean.
Spotlight on the University of Ottawa Research Team
At the heart of this discovery is the Department of Geography, Environment and Geomatics at the University of Ottawa, home to world-renowned glaciologists. Lead author W. Zheng, a PhD candidate, conducted the analysis as part of her thesis, showcasing the hands-on training available in uOttawa's graduate programs.
Professor Luke Copland, Director of the Laboratory for Cryospheric Research, provided expert oversight. With decades of fieldwork in the Yukon and Arctic Canada, Copland has authored over 100 publications on glacier surges, mass balance, and marine-terminating glaciers. His lab equips students with skills in GIS, radar altimetry, and field logistics essential for polar research.
Collaborators L. Gray and L. Chandhulal from uOttawa contributed DEM processing expertise, while partners from the University of Alberta, Waterloo, and Queen's University brought complementary strengths in ice velocity and geomorphology. This interdisciplinary team exemplifies how uOttawa fosters national collaborations.
Characteristics and Activity Patterns of the Lakes
The 37 lakes are distributed across Ellesmere, Axel Heiberg, Devon Islands, and Baffin Island, primarily under tidewater and land-terminating glaciers. Classic SGLs dominate, but the novel terminal and medial types suggest diverse formation mechanisms at glacier junctions.
Activity is episodic, with 80% showing fill-drain cycles over 1-3 years. Peak filling occurs during summer melt seasons, draining in winter via subglacial channels. Statistical analysis revealed a strong negative correlation (r = -0.68) between lake activity frequency and glacier surface mass balance—glaciers losing mass rapidly host the most dynamic lakes.
- Lake L1 (largest): 48.5 km², volume change ~2 km³, under Prince of Wales Icefield glacier.
- Terminal examples: Form at glacier forks, enhancing instability.
- Medial SGLs: Rare, linked to moraine-dammed water.
These patterns indicate basal water pressures lubricate glacier beds, accelerating flow.
Connection to Accelerating Glacier Mass Loss
Canadian Arctic glaciers have lost mass at rates exceeding 60 gigatonnes per year since 2000, contributing ~0.17 mm annually to sea level rise—a figure rising with warming. The uOttawa study links active SGLs to this trend: water from lakes reduces basal friction, promoting sliding and calving.
Previous uOttawa research identified hypersaline lakes under Devon Ice Cap (2018), but this inventory expands to peripheral glaciers. As Arctic air temperatures rise 3x the global average, more melt infiltrates, potentially activating hundreds more SGLs.
Critical Implications for Sea Level Rise Projections
The CAA's glaciers represent 10% of global glacier area outside ice sheets. Enhanced basal sliding from SGL networks could amplify mass loss by 20-30%, per modeling. This necessitates updates to IPCC projections, where peripheral glaciers contribute 0.4 mm/yr SLR by 2100.
The full study in The Cryosphere emphasizes integrating SGL dynamics into models for accurate forecasts.

Untapped Potential: Microbial Ecosystems in Subglacial Lakes
Subglacial lakes harbor unique microbial life, isolated for millennia in dark, nutrient-poor conditions. Analogous to Antarctica's Lake Vostok, CAA SGLs may support extremophiles resilient to pressure and cold. uOttawa's prior Devon Ice Cap work found hypersaline brines teeming with microbes, hinting at astrobiology applications for icy moons like Europa.
Drilling these lakes could reveal ancient DNA and climate records, advancing paleoclimatology at Canadian universities.
uOttawa's Leadership in Cryospheric Sciences
The University of Ottawa's Geography department excels in Arctic research, with Copland's lab securing NSERC funding for satellite and field campaigns. Alumni secure postdocs at NASA and European ice centers, while undergrads gain hands-on experience via field schools in Svalbard and Yukon.
Recent grants support ICESat-2 analysis, positioning uOttawa as a hub for next-gen glaciologists.
National Collaborations Elevating Canadian Research
This study unites uOttawa with Waterloo's Joseph MacKay (glacier hydrology expert), Alberta's Wes van Wychen (ice velocity), and Queen's Scott Lamoureux (geochronology). Such partnerships, funded by NSERC Northern Research Supplements, amplify Canada's voice in global cryosphere monitoring.
CBC coverage highlights team fieldwork, emphasizing inter-university synergy.
Overcoming Arctic Research Challenges
Fieldwork demands helicopters, polar bears deterrents, and -40°C endurance. uOttawa trains students in safety protocols and drone surveys. Satellite tech mitigates access issues, but climate-driven sea ice loss complicates logistics.
Career Opportunities in Glaciology at Canadian Universities
Canada's cryospheric expertise offers robust careers: research assistants ($50-70k), postdocs ($60-90k NSERC), professors (tenure-track ~$120k+). uOttawa posts roles in remote sensing; Waterloo seeks hydrology postdocs. Demand grows with Arctic sovereignty and climate policy needs.
- Skills: GIS, Python for DEMs, field glaciology.
- Funding: NSERC Discovery Grants, Polar Continental Shelf Program.
- Employers: Unis, Environment Canada, Inuit orgs.
Explore openings at leading labs.
Future Horizons: Expanding Arctic Monitoring
Upcoming satellites like CryoSat-3 and Surface Water Ocean Topography will refine SGL inventories. uOttawa plans drilling missions and AI-driven detection. As warming intensifies, these lakes' role in SLR will demand urgent study from Canada's academic powerhouses.
This discovery cements University of Ottawa's role in safeguarding the North while training future leaders.



