WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.020 --> 00:00:04.120 When melt water leaves an ice sheet, where does it go? 2 00:00:04.120 --> 00:00:08.300 Some of it it quickly flows off the surface of the ice toward the ocean 3 00:00:08.300 --> 00:00:12.330 through underground channels. But some water gets trapped near the top of the ice sheet 4 00:00:12.330 --> 00:00:16.400 in a region of compacted snow which has not yet 5 00:00:16.400 --> 00:00:20.580 been squeezed hard enough to become solid ice. 6 00:00:20.580 --> 00:00:24.610 This region is known as firn and it sits between the fresh snow above and the solid ice below. 7 00:00:24.610 --> 00:00:28.680 In some places, so much water can accumulate in the firn 8 00:00:28.680 --> 00:00:32.700 that it acts as a natural aquifer within an ice sheet or a glacier. 9 00:00:32.700 --> 00:00:36.820 A new NASA study of the massive Helheim Glacier 10 00:00:36.820 --> 00:00:40.860 in eastern Greenland shows that some of the water trapped in the firn 11 00:00:40.860 --> 00:00:44.890 may be reaching the bedrock of the glacier through giant cracks in the ice 12 00:00:44.890 --> 00:00:48.910 called crevasses. 13 00:00:48.910 --> 00:00:52.990 Helheim is criss-crossed by a series of these large crevasses, 14 00:00:52.990 --> 00:00:57.020 and models show that the water flows into these crevasses and descends all the way down to the glacier bed. 15 00:00:57.020 --> 00:01:01.190 From there, the water has a clear path to the ocean. 16 00:01:01.190 --> 00:01:05.310 This study is a step toward understanding how firn aquifer water 17 00:01:05.310 --> 00:01:10.637 contributes to sea level rise.