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Synthesizing multiple remote-sensing techniques for subglacial hydrologic mapping: application to a lake system beneath MacAyeal Ice Stream, West Antarctica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2017

Helen Amanda Fricker
Affiliation:
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California–San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0225, USA E-mail: hafricker@ucsd.edu
Ted Scambos
Affiliation:
National Snow and Ice Data Center, 1540 30th Street, Campus Box 449, CIRES, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0449, USA
Sasha Carter
Affiliation:
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California–San Diego, La Jolla, California 92093-0225, USA E-mail: hafricker@ucsd.edu
Curt Davis
Affiliation:
Electrical & Computer Engineering, 323 Engineering Bldg. West, University of Missouri–Columbia, Columbia, Missouri 65211, USA
Terry Haran
Affiliation:
National Snow and Ice Data Center, 1540 30th Street, Campus Box 449, CIRES, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0449, USA
Ian Joughin
Affiliation:
Polar Science Center, Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington, 1013 NE 40th Street, Seattle, Washington 98105-6698, USA
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Abstract

We present an analysis of the active hydrologic system of MacAyeal Ice Stream (MacIS), West Antarctica, from a synthesis of multiple remote-sensing techniques: satellite laser altimetry; satellite image differencing; and hydrologic potential mapping (using a satellite-derived DEM and a bedrock DEM from airborne radio-echo sounding). Combining these techniques augments the information provided by each one individually, and allows us to develop a protocol for studying subglacial hydrologic systems in a holistic manner. Our study reveals five large active subglacial lakes under MacIS, the largest of which undergoes volume changes of at least 1.0 km3. We discuss the hydrologic properties of this system and present evidence for links between the lakes. At least three of the lakes are co-located with sticky spots, i.e. regions of high local basal shear stress. We also find evidence for surface elevation changes due to ice-dynamic effects (not just water movement) caused by changes in basal resistance. Lastly, we show that satellite radar altimetry is of limited use for monitoring lake activity on fast-flowing ice streams with surfaces that undulate on ∼10 km length scales.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 2010
Figure 0

Table 1. Acquisition dates for the 16 ∼33 day ICESat campaigns using the 9 day repeat orbit acquired up to March 2009. Just the last 33 days of the longer laser 2a campaign were repeated in subsequent campaigns. Note that laser 3k and laser 2d are from approximately the same time; laser 3 failed on 19 October 2008 and laser 2 was turned on to complete the set of ground tracks (with some overlap, i.e. tracks 96–145 were repeated). Data from the laser 1 (February–March 2003) and laser 2f campaigns (October 2009) are not analysed here (laser 1 was not in the 91 day repeat orbit, and laser 2f was short and not fully calibrated at the time of writing)

Figure 1

Fig. 1. (a) ICESat tracks across MacIS showing five regions with significant vertical motion detected by ICESat repeat-track analysis (2003–09), combined with information from a hydrologic potential map and image-difference images. ICESat tracks are numbered and are colour-coded by the total range (i.e. maximum minus minimum) in ICESat elevation from 2003 through 2009. Ice flow is from left to right. Background image is the MODIS MOA (Scambos and others, 2007). White outlines show inferred lake extents; black dotted line for southern limit of Mac3 is due to ambiguous signals there (section 4). The break-in-slope from MOA, which approximates the ice-shelf grounding line (Brunt and others, 2010), is the solid black curve to the lower right of the image. The black dashed squares show the extent of the image-difference images shown in Figure 2. (b) Map of estimated hydrologic potential (kPa, relative to the subglacial pressure at the grounding line) for the same region. The blue dashed curves are the estimated flow paths for water through the system. The yellow ellipses show the approximate starting (large ellipse) and ending (smaller ellipse) locations of the tremors detected by Winberry and others (2009), as derived from their figure 1.

Figure 2

Fig. 2. Difference images for the two regions of MacIS where subglacial lakes were detected by ICESat. (a) The upper region that covers subglacial lakes Mac4 and Mac5 and (b) the lower region that covers subglacial lakes Mac1, Mac2 and Mac3. Illumination in both the difference images is from the upper right. The region south of the outline for Mac1 is a possible elevation-change feature that is not well supported by the ICESat data. Boxes showing the extent of these two regions are shown in Figure 1a.

Figure 3

Fig. 3. Subglacial lake Mac1. (a) Repeat ICESat profiles and elevation anomaly for track 275. (b) Time series of elevation/volume changes derived from all three ICESat tracks. Dashed lines indicate missing ICESat campaigns. (c–h) Selection of image-differencing results verifying various stages of the ICESat-derived fill/drain cycle. Red vertical lines in (b) show the approximate timings of the images for each of the years 2003–08.

Figure 4

Fig. 4. Subglacial lake Mac2. (a) Repeat ICESat profiles and elevation anomaly for track 22. (b) Time series of elevation/volume changes derived from tracks 22 and 102. Dashed lines indicate missing ICESat campaigns. Red vertical lines show the approximate timings of the images comprising the 2006–03 image difference.

Figure 5

Fig. 5. Subglacial lake Mac3. (a) Difference image for 2008–04. White outline shows inferred subglacial lake extents. Black dotted line for the southern limit is due to ambiguous signals there. (b) ICESat elevation profiles and elevation anomalies for track 141, interpreted as a true lake signal. (c, d) ICESat elevation profiles, elevation anomalies and differences from first repeat (laser 2a) for tracks 260 and 87 across the downstream region of the diagonal sticky spot shown in Figure 1. (e) Averaged time series derived from four ICESat tracks. Dashed lines indicate missing ICESat campaigns. Red vertical lines show the approximate timings of the images comprising the 2006–03 and 2008–04 image differences.

Figure 6

Fig. 6. Subglacial lakes Mac4 and Mac5. (a) ICESat elevation profiles and elevation anomalies for track 364 across both lakes. (b) Averaged volume time series derived from ICESat tracks 325 and 364. Dashed lines indicate missing ICESat campaigns (note there are no data for campaigns later than laser 3g (November 2006)). Red vertical lines show the approximate timings of the images comprising the 2006–05 image difference shown in Figure 2a.

Figure 7

Fig. 7. Envisat RA data analysis over the MacIS subglacial lakes. (a) Locations of Envisat orbital crossovers, colour-coded by the total range in elevation, 2003–07; blue and red circles on track Env-197 illustrate the approximate diameters of the RA BLF and PLF respectively. (b) Elevation time series for two crossovers on subglacial lake Mac1. (c) Near repeats of Envisat track 197 across subglacial lake Mac1, and elevations derived from the photoclinometric/ICESat DEM.

Figure 8

Fig. 8. Average volume time series for the five subglacial lakes in the MacIS system.

Figure 9

Fig. 9. Basal shear stress derived for MacIS using the method of Joughin and others (2004) with image-enhanced DEM; outlines of MacIS subglacial lakes are overlaid.