Author:
Hulbe Christina L.,Rignot Eric,Macayeal Douglas R.
Abstract
Comparison between numerical model ice-shelf flow simulations and synthetic
aperture radar (SAR) interferograms is used to study ice-flow dynamics at the
Hemmen Ice Rise (HIR) and Lassiter Coast (LC) corners of the iceberg-calving front
of the Filchnei—Ronne Ice Shelf, Antarctica. The interferograms are constructed
from SAR images provided by the European Space Agency's remote-sensing satellites
(ERS-1/2). Narrow bands of large shear strain rate are observed along the
boundaries between fast-flowing ice-shelf ice and no-flow boundaries. Large rifts,
opened where the ice shelf separates from the coast, appear to be filled with a
melange of sea ice, ice-shelf fragments, and snow. Trial and error is used to find
the best match between artificial interferograms, constructed from modelled ice
flow, and the observed interferograms. We find that at both HIR and LC, ice with
in the coastal boundary layers must be significantly softer than adjacent ice. At
HIR the rift-filling ice melange transmits stress from one ice-shelf fragment to
another; thus it must have mechanical competence and must moderate both separation
of the ice shelf from the coast and the release of icebergs. However, the ice
melange along the LC does not. The difference may be related to melange thickness,
which could vary in the two locations due to differences in sub-ice-shelf
oceanography or perhaps to regional atmospheric warming, currently under way along
the Antarctic Peninsula. Future warming could weaken the melange ice around HIR as
well, causing the ice shelf to lose contact with that shelf-front anchor.
Publisher
International Glaciological Society
Cited by
6 articles.
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