Author:
Bamber J. L.,Bindschadler R. A.
Abstract
Recent studies by several groups have indicated that the performance of
general circulation models (GCMs) over the ice sheets is severely limited by
the relatively low resolution of the models at the margins, where surface
slopes are greatest. To provide accurate energy-budget estimates,
resolutions of better than 0.5° are desirable, requiring nested or multiple
gridding and accurate, high-resolution boundary conditions. Here we present
a new, high-resolution (5 km) digital elevation model for the Antarctic ice
sheet, derived from radar-altimeter data obtained from the geodetic phase of
the satellite, ERS-1. These data have been combined with the revised
ice-thickness grid reported in Bamber and
Huybrechts (1996) to produce a bed- and surface-elevation dataset
for use in regional and global climate and paleo-climaie modelling
applications. The real level of spatial detail in the datasets has been
examined with the aid of Landsat Thematic Mapper data. Imagery around Ice
Stream D, West Antarctica, shows that the revised ice-thickness grid is
accurately geolocated, and contains valuable fine-scale topographic detail
beyond that available from the cartographic version of the data (Drewry, 1983). The surface topography in
the region of the Ross Ice Shelf has been used to illustrate the level of
detail in both the vertical and horizontal resolution of (he surface
dataset. Laudsat data has also been used to examine features in the
surface-elevation data. In particular, the location of the grounding zone,
for Ice Streams D and E, derived from the two data sources shows good
agreement. The results of this validation underscore the utility of the new
datasets for high-resolution modelling, and highlight the limitations of the
Folio maps for such applications.
Publisher
International Glaciological Society
Cited by
120 articles.
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