RECONSTRUCTION OF SUBGLACIAL RELIEF FROM RADIO ECHO SOUNDING RECORDS

Geophysics ◽  
1970 ◽  
Vol 35 (6) ◽  
pp. 1099-1115 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. H. Harrison

In 1967 a party from the Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge, England, carried out a radio echo sounding survey of the Antarctic ice sheet; their data have been used in the analyses discussed. The radio echo sounding apparatus, basically a pulse‐modulated radar operating at 35 Mhz, was installed in a U.S. Navy Constellation aircraft with the aerials attached to the tail, giving a fan‐shaped beam. The beam is broadest along the line of flight, causing problems of interpretation analogous with those encountered in marine echo sounding and seismic surveying. Also, bottom echoes are affected by refraction at the ice surface. Examples of hyperbolic variations of echo delay with horizontal movement may be seen at the edges of ice shelves, crevasses, or cracks at the bottom of the ice. Sometimes more complex surfaces can give roughly hyperbolic echo profiles. It is possible to distinguish specular from nonspecular reflections; we use a method of computing the position of specular reflecting points from the echo profile which allows the shape of the reflecting surface to be calculated. A computer program transforms the digitized film record into a real space profile. Errors may arise from faulty digitization, but these have been largely eliminated by checking the digitized points early in the program. Occasionally, because of their similar range and echo strength, strong side echoes may be confused with sub‐ice features. A cross‐section of Nimrod Glacier and the bottom of the ice sheet near Vostok have been plotted; in both cases there is a striking difference between the computed space profile and the echo profile.

1982 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
pp. 32-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. L. Brooks

During the operational lifetime of the Seasat altimeter from 3 July to 10 October 1978, more than 450 overflights were made over East Antarctica inland to latitude 72°S. An analysis of selected passes over a variety of ice features demonstrates that the oceanographic altimeter performed surprisingly well over the ice sheet and ice shelves, acquiring useful measurements during approximately 70% of each pass. The altimeter's onboard tracking system dampened out the ice-surface elevations, but post-flight retracking of the stored return waveforms reveals excellent ice-surface details. After waveform retracking, the altimeter repeatability is better than ±1 m.


1999 ◽  
Vol 29 ◽  
pp. 231-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Nixdorf ◽  
D. Steinhage ◽  
U. Meyer ◽  
L. Hempel ◽  
M. Jenett ◽  
...  

AbstractSince 1994 the Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI) has operated an airborne radio-echo sounding system for remote-sensing studies of the polar ice caps in Antarctica and in Greenland. It is used to map ice thicknesses and internal layernigs of glaciers, ice sheets and ice shelves, and is capable of penetrating ice thicknesses of up to 4 km. The system was designed and built by AWI in cooperation with Aerodata Flugmeßtechnik GmbH, Technische Umversitat Hamburg-Harburg and the Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V. The system uses state-of-the-art techniques, and results in high vertical (5 m) as well as along-track (3.25 m) resolution. The radar signal is a 150 MHz burst with a duration of 60 or 600 ns. The peak power is 1.6 kW, and the system sensitivity is 190 dB. The short backfire principle has been adopted and optimized for antennae used on Polar2, a Dormer 228-100 aircraft, resulting in an antenna gain of 14 dB each. Digital data recording allows further processing. The quality of the recorded data can be monitored on screen and as online analogue plots during the flight.


1994 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. 55-60
Author(s):  
Anja L.L.M. Verbers ◽  
Volkmar Damm

Glacio-geological field work and radar ice-thickness sounding were carried out in the area between David and Mawson Glaciers. A subglacial topographic map has been compiled from radio-echo-sounding data. The northern part of this map shows that the trench of David Glacier reaches a depth of more than 1000 m below sea level. The area south of David Glacier comprises a landscape of nunatak clusters dissected by glaciated valleys with ice thicknesses as much as 800 m. Subglacial cirques occur at the outer margins of the nunatak clusters. A model for the regional glacial history is proposed. It starts with a major deglaciation in the Pliocene, which results in marine transgression in basins west of the Transantarctic Mountains. During the late Pliocene, the ice advanced towards the northeast, depositing a thin layer of (Sirius Group) till containing reworked mid-Pliocene marine diatoms. Due to accelerated mountain uplift, the ice cut iIlto the pre-Pliocene peneplain, eroding broad valleys. A period of ice-sheet retreat followed to expose a landscape of large nunataks separated by wide valleys. During this period, local cirque glaciation occurred. When the ice sheet advanced again, another phase of uplift forced the glaciers to cut deeper into the valleys. Probably since the Last Glacial Maximum the ice surface has lowered by about 100 m.


1989 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 124-126
Author(s):  
Hirokazu Ohmae ◽  
Fumihiko Nishio ◽  
Shinji Mae

A large part of the area of the Shirase Glacier drainage basin has been surveyed by airborne (operating frequency: 179 MHz) and ground-based (60 MHz) radio echo-sounding to define the bedrock topography and to investigate the condition of bed/ice interface since 1982.It is shown that the reflection intensity from the bed, which is corrected for attenuation in the ice sheet, has a higher value for reflection intensity in the down-stream area of Shirase Glacier than in the up-stream area. The area of strongest intensity of reflection from the bed coincides with the area for which the calculated temperature at the bed is above −1°C. The boundary area between the highest and lowest values of corrected reflected intensity corresponds to the area of decreasing basal shear stress. It is found that the distribution of high corrected reflection intensity corresponds to the area of thinning of the ice sheet, which has been measured by ice-flow observation in the Shirase Glacier drainage basin.


1988 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 219
Author(s):  
Shinji Mae

The Japanese Antarctic Research Expedition (JARE) has conducted glaciological studies on Mizuho Plateau since 1981. We have already reported that the ice sheet flowing from Mizuho Plateau into Shirase Glacier is thinning at a rate of about 70 cm/year and that the profile of the distribution of basal shear stress is similar to that of surging glaciers. A 5 year glaciological programme on Mizuho Plateau and in east Queen Maud Land is now being carried out and we have obtained the following new results: (1) The ice sheet in the down-stream region (where ice elevation is lower than about 2400 m) is thinning, based on measurements of horizontal and vertical flow velocity, strain-rate, the slope of the ice surface, the accumulation rate and densification of snow. (2) δ18O analysis of deep ice cores obtained at Mizuho Station (2240 m a.s.l.) and point G2 (1730 m a.s.l.) shows that δ18O increased about 200 years ago at Mizuho Station and about 400 years ago at point G2. If we can assume that the increase in δ18O is caused by the thinning of the ice sheet, then this result means that this thinning propagates to up-stream areas. (3) Radio-echo-sounding measurements on Mizuho Plateau show that the ice base in the down-stream region is wet. This supports the result described in (1), since the basal sliding due to a wet base causes ice-sheet thinning, as proposed in our previous studies. In summary, a possible explanation of ice-sheet variation on Mizuho Plateau is as follows: the thinning of the ice sheet, caused by the basal sliding due to basal ice melting, started at Shirase Glacier and has been propagating up-stream to reach its present position. A simple calculation, using flow velocities, shows that the thinning started at Shirase Glacier about 1500–2000 years ago.


1994 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. 55-60
Author(s):  
Anja L.L.M. Verbers ◽  
Volkmar Damm

Glacio-geological field work and radar ice-thickness sounding were carried out in the area between David and Mawson Glaciers. A subglacial topographic map has been compiled from radio-echo-sounding data. The northern part of this map shows that the trench of David Glacier reaches a depth of more than 1000 m below sea level. The area south of David Glacier comprises a landscape of nunatak clusters dissected by glaciated valleys with ice thicknesses as much as 800 m. Subglacial cirques occur at the outer margins of the nunatak clusters. A model for the regional glacial history is proposed. It starts with a major deglaciation in the Pliocene, which results in marine transgression in basins west of the Transantarctic Mountains. During the late Pliocene, the ice advanced towards the northeast, depositing a thin layer of (Sirius Group) till containing reworked mid-Pliocene marine diatoms. Due to accelerated mountain uplift, the ice cut iIlto the pre-Pliocene peneplain, eroding broad valleys. A period of ice-sheet retreat followed to expose a landscape of large nunataks separated by wide valleys. During this period, local cirque glaciation occurred. When the ice sheet advanced again, another phase of uplift forced the glaciers to cut deeper into the valleys. Probably since the Last Glacial Maximum the ice surface has lowered by about 100 m.


1979 ◽  
Vol 24 (90) ◽  
pp. 483
Author(s):  
David J. Drewry

Abstract Systematic radio echo-sounding during three seasons since 1971–72 has produced data on the configuration of the ice sheet in East Antarctica. In the sector extending inland from southern Victoria Land, the ice sheet exhibits a large ridge which drives ice towards David Glacier in the north and Mulock and Byrd Glaciers to the south. Within 100 km of the McMurdo dry-valley region soundings along ten sub-parallel lines (c. 10 km apart) provides detail on ice surface and flow patterns at the ridge tip. A small surface dome lies just inland of Taylor Glacier. The surface drops by 100 m or more before rising to join the major ridge in East Antarctica.


1987 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 221-224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Minoru Yoshida ◽  
Kazunobu Yamashita ◽  
Shinji Mae

Extensive echo-sounding was carried out in east Dronning Maud Land during the 1984 field season. A 179 MHz radar with separate transmitting and receiving antennae was used and the echoes were recorded by a digital system to detect minute reflections. The results gave cross-sections of the ice sheet along traverse routes from lat. 69 °S. to 75°S, Detailed observations on the ground at Mizuho station showed that there was elliptical polarization in the internally reflected echoes when two antennae, kept in parallel with each other, were rotated horizontally. The internal echoes were most clearly distinguished when the antenna azimuth was oriented perpendicular to the flow line of the ice sheet. The internal echoes with a high reflection coefficient were detected at depths of 500–700 m and 1000–1500 m at Mizuho station. Since a distinct internal echo at a depth of 500 m coincides with a 5 cm thick volcanic ash-laden ice layer found in the 700 m ice core taken near the observation site, these echoes may correspond to the acidic ice layers formed by past volcanic events in east Dronning Maud Land.


1986 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 210
Author(s):  
Mark F. Meier

In 1965, the first International Symposium on Glacier Mapping was held in Ottawa. This was convened at the beginning of the International Hydrological Decade, at a time of great expansion in glaciological research around the world. The purpose and scope of glacier mapping were well defined, perhaps for the first time, by the late Valter Schytt and others at the Symposium, It must be remembered that this symposium took place at a time when much of the technology we now take for granted did not exist. In some respects the symposium was prophetic: Gordon Robin suggested that the topography of the ice sheet might be measurable with an altimeter mounted in a satellite, and A.H. Waite, Jr. discussed the beginning attempts to sound glaciers using radio waves. Now in 1985 a Symposium on the same subject has been concluded in Reykjavik. It is apparent that the interest generated in the first Symposium has had a real effect, and some dreams have come true. Jay Zwally reported that repeated satellite altimetry has measured growth of part of the Greenland Ice Sheet, and sophisticated radio echo-sounding programs are adding the third dimension to glacier mapping. And glacier mapping has progressed in many other new and exciting directions. However, problems remain. For instance, only 20% of the Antarctic continent has been mapped at a scale of 1:250 000 or larger and what maps do exist of Antarctica were compiled over long periods of time and cannot be precisely dated. There are still few maps of remote areas in the world and these often lack geographic coordinates and captions in a language of common international use. The navigation or positioning systems used in many large-scale mapping programs have not been as highly developed as they should be. Much glacier mapping data now exists in digital form, but many of the digital data bases can not be accessed internationally. What are the needs for the future? First, we need wider application of digital data bases, including digital terrain models and geographic information systems. These should be set up so that the data can be retrieved by scientists from different countries, a difficult problem for parochial, technical, and political reasons. Attention needs to be given to long-term storage of digital data to insure against degradation with time. Once a good digital data base is established, the appropriate hard copy maps can be produced to whatever specifications are appropriate. But computers will not solve everyone’s needs. We certainly will need, far into the future, classical paper maps, the so-called “hard copy” that displays all of the information the field glaciologist or traveller requires. Public display maps that show the topography in an artistic way that is clear to the inexperienced viewer will always be needed. Of course, all maps should have geographic coordinates and a legend in an international language, such as English, to meet the needs of the international community. The quality of mapping will have to improve to meet tomorrow’s needs, This will include such things as improved definition of ice sheet surfaces, especially along ice divides so that flow patterns can be discerned. We need to integrate accurate positioning systems with the radio echo-sounding or other mapping systems. Repeated mapping of certain glaciers or ice mass areas, using similar mapping specifications, will be needed to detect change in these ice masses; such maps will have to be very precise in the measurement of surface ice elevation, We will certainly need “snapshot” maps of the large ice sheets, a task that can probably be accomplished only through the use of satellite technology. The field has come a long way in the last twenty years but it will probably progress far more in the next twenty. I wish to thank all of the speakers and the participants and those who so superbly organized the Symposium for a most challenging and productive meeting. Thank you all very much.


Polar Record ◽  
1975 ◽  
Vol 17 (109) ◽  
pp. 359-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Drewry

In 1967 the Scott Polar Research Institute (SPRI) undertook the first longrange airborne radio echo soundings of the Antarctic ice sheet. The results of this season were encouraging and led to other programmes being organized in 1969–70, 1971–72, and 1974–75. The initial impetus for this work came from A. P. Crary of the US National Science Foundation (NSF), who suggested that the radio echo equipment that had been developed at SPRI under the direction of S. Evans and G. de Q. Robin, with financial assistance from the Royal Society's Paul Instrument Fund and later from the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) should be operated over the Antarctic ice sheet, and he offered the logistic support of the US Antarctic Research Program (USARP). Since those early flights, a productive relationship has been developed between SPRI and that arm of NSF represented by USARP and US Navy Task Force 43 (now 199) and, up to the end of the 1971–72 season, it had resulted in 210000 km of radio echo profiling in the Antarctic. A further 135 000 km was accomplished during the 1974–75 season.


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