Abstract
Abstract. We developed a multi-mission satellite altimetry analysis over the Antarctic
Ice Sheet which comprises Seasat, Geosat, ERS-1, ERS-2, Envisat, ICESat and
CryoSat-2. After a consistent reprocessing and a stepwise calibration of the
inter-mission offsets, we obtained monthly grids of multi-mission surface
elevation change (SEC) with respect to the reference epoch
09/2010 (in the format of month/year) from 1978 to 2017. A validation with independent elevation
changes from in situ and airborne observations as well as a comparison with a
firn model proves that the different missions and observation modes have been
successfully combined to a seamless multi-mission time series. For coastal
East Antarctica, even Seasat and Geosat provide reliable information and,
hence, allow for the analysis of four decades of elevation changes. The
spatial and temporal resolution of our result allows for the identification
of when and where significant changes in elevation occurred. These time
series add detailed information to the evolution of surface elevation in such
key regions as Pine Island Glacier, Totten Glacier, Dronning Maud Land or
Lake Vostok. After applying a density mask, we calculated time series of mass
changes and found that the Antarctic Ice Sheet north of 81.5∘ S was
losing mass at an average rate of -85±16 Gt yr−1 between 1992 and
2017, which accelerated to -137±25 Gt yr−1 after 2010.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
Cited by
86 articles.
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