Abstract
Aerial photography has been used as a mapping tool in the Antarctic Peninsula
region sinre the late 1920s. Following pioneering work by Wilkins in 1928,
Ellsworth in 1934 and the British Graham Land Expedition in 1934-37, the Falkland
Islands and Dependencies Aerial Survey Expedition carried out extensive aerial
photography during the period 1955-57. Since then, many other aerial surveys have
been carried out, and the result is an archive of aerial photography that, for
some localities, spans 40 years. The production of maps both from different
generations of photographs and satellite images has revealed many changes in the
extent of ice cover with time. For example, changes in ice shelves such as the
Wordie Ice Shelf, Larsen Ice Shelf and Müller Ice Shelf, are well recorded, and
the termini of some glaciers have retreated. However, the most pervasive change is
the consistent decline in the extent of small bodies of snow and ice. This paper
shows how perennial snow or ice cover has decreased in the northern Marguerite Bay
area, at 68°S. The correlation of the change with elevation and with climate
records from Adelaide and Rothera research stations in the Antarctic Peninsula
region is examined.
Publisher
International Glaciological Society
Cited by
52 articles.
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