Temperatures have soared in Greenland recently, the Danish Meteorological Institute said, in line with warming trends experts have linked to global warming.
In the capital Nuuk, the mercury hit 13C (55F) on Monday 20 December, compared to the -5.3C that is average for this time of year.
In Qaanaaq in the north, temperatures reached 8.3C, when the seasonal average is usually -20.1C, DMI said.
DMI did not say whether the temperatures recorded had broken records set on the island.
"One of the reasons we're seeing high temperatures is the foehn meteorological phenomenon," a warm wind that is common in the world's largest island, said DMI climatologist Caroline Drost Jensen.
"It is a bit unusual that it is simultaneously happening across such a vast territory and for so long," she said.
🇬🇱🌡️ Med tocifrede varmegrader har det været usædvanlig varmt flere steder i Grønland de sidste par dage. Årsagen skal findes i vejrfænomenet føn og et godt samarbejde.https://t.co/tNyoXDZgVA
— DMI (@dmidk) December 21, 2021
Toke Brødsgaard fangede solopgangens skær i den smeltende sne i Nuuk forleden pic.twitter.com/210WScpQJ1
"Global warming is supporting the elevated temperatures that we are currently observing over Greenland," she said.
Over the summer, temperatures 10C higher than average led to loss of glaciers across the vast territory.
On some days, the glaciers were recorded to have lost a record eight billion tonnes of ice, double the average they usually shed in the summer.