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A comparison of contemporaneous airborne altimetry and ice-thickness measurements of Antarctic ice shelves

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 August 2023

Allison M. Chartrand*
Affiliation:
Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA
Ian M. Howat
Affiliation:
Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA
*
Corresponding author: A. M. Chartrand; Email: allisonchartrand@gmail.com
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Abstract

Estimates of ice shelf mass loss are typically based on surface height measurements, assuming hydrostatic equilibrium and estimated firn thickness. Recent investigations, however, challenge the assumption that ice shelves are freely floating, particularly in proximity to narrow structures such as basal channels and shear margins. We compare contemporaneous measurements of Antarctic ice shelf thickness, from ice-penetrating radar, to freeboard height, from laser altimetry, acquired during multiple airborne surveys. On average, the hydrostatic thickness differs from observed thickness by at least ~17 ± 98 m, but this difference varies well beyond the propagated error within and among ice shelves, and depends on the corrections applied. We find that uncertainty in firn thickness can account for most, but not all, of the imbalance. Overall, errors in hydrostatic thickness do not significantly impact estimated basal melt rates. Our results indicate that localized approaches to estimating ice shelf thickness and rates of change are not applicable at large scales, and vice versa, and point to the need for more abundant and accurate firn and ice thickness measurements to improve estimates and predictions of ice shelf mass loss.

Information

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of International Glaciological Society
Figure 0

Figure 1. Map of Antarctica showing the ice shelf system boundaries (boxes) colored by the mean hydrostatic residual for the case in which steady state FDM firn corrections and MDT corrections are applied. Also shown are the IPR ground track coordinates (gray points represent all IPR data; white points are those used in the hydrostatic residual analysis). Base map is the REMA DEM hillshade image, and the black curve shows the 2007–09 InSAR grounding line.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Schematic showing relevant quantities for a column of ice floating in seawater. The ice below sea level is discontinuous to exaggerate the vertical scale. Quantities on the left of the ice column represent observed values for an ice column that is not necessarily in hydrostatic equilibrium. H, total observed ice thickness; h, observed freeboard thickness; Ha, thickness of the firn air column; Quantities on the right represent HE, total hydrostatic ice thickness for an ice column with the observed freeboard, h, in hydrostatic equilibrium, calculated using Eqn (1); R is equal to the difference between HE and H.

Figure 2

Table 1. Errors/Uncertainties for data involved in the calculation of R

Figure 3

Table 2. Aggregate hydrostatic residual results for the six cases with different Ha and MDT corrections applied (σ =standard deviation). All units are meters

Figure 4

Figure 3. Histograms of R for each corrections scenario.

Figure 5

Table 3. Overview of hydrostatic residual (R) and related statistics for all ice shelves in the case with sFDM and MDT corrections applied (σ = standard deviation).

Figure 6

Figure 4. a, b: Histograms of R; c, d: histograms of percent difference between hydrostatic and measured ice thickness for all MCoRDS (West Antarctica, a, c) and HiCARS (East Antarctica, b, d) data used in analysis.

Figure 7

Figure 5. Left Y axis shows the cumulative (light gray) and bin total (dark gray) number of points within each successive distance from the grounding line (0 km). Right Y axis shows the mean R of all cumulative points (solid curve) and points within each bin (dashed curve) for each successive distance from the grounding line. Panel a shows bins of 25 km; b shows bins of 1 km.

Figure 8

Figure 6. Selected transects that start and/or end at a grounding line with a break-in-slope feature 1–5 km from the grounding line. Top subpanel of a–c shows freeboard height h (blue curve, left Y axis), IPR thickness H and hydrostatic thickness HE (orange solid and red dashed curves, right Y axis), while the bottom subpanel shows hydrostatic residual R. Map insets show the location of each transect (a: transect b-b’ downstream of Institute Ice Stream, b: transect f-f’ on Thwaites Ice Shelf and c: transect b-b’ on Cook Ice Shelf), with plotted portions in a-c marked in orange.

Figure 9

Figure 7. Selected flow-transverse transects with shading to highlight the relationship between H and HE ~ different topographic features. Yellow (green) shading highlights where the surface topography is muted (exaggerated) compared to the thickness profile, and blue (red) shading highlights where the freeboard is too low (high) within large surface troughs/thin points (such as basal channels). Top subpanel of a-c shows freeboard height h (blue curve, left Y axis), IPR thickness H and hydrostatic thickness HE (orange solid and red dashed curves, right Y axis), while the bottom subpanel shows hydrostatic residual R (black curve, left Y axis) and the sum of normal strain rates and the shear strain rates (solid blue and dashed red curves, right Y axis). Map insets show the location of each transect; a: MCoRDS transect b-b’ on Ronne-Filchner ice shelf in the Foundation ice stream sector, b: MCoRDS transect e-e’ on the Getz Ice Shelf, and c: HiCARS transect e-e’ on Totten Ice Shelf.

Figure 10

Figure 8. Cartoon graphic showing relevant quantities for a column of ice floating in seawater. The ice below sea level is discontinuous to exaggerate the vertical scale. Quantities represent observed or accepted values as in Fig. 2, with added HaE, which is the firn air column thickness necessary to bring the observed ice column into hydrostatic equilibrium, and dHa, which is the difference between HaE and the modeled firn air column thickness Ha.

Figure 11

Figure 9. Thwaites transect d-d’ showing modeled Ha (black curve), and HaE (gray curve).

Figure 12

Figure 10. a: Median normal strain rates (elon + eshear, black dots) and absolute values of shear strain rates (|eshear|, gray '+' signs) for points within 1 m bins of R for all IPR points. b, c: Median elon + etrans and |eshear|, respectively, within 1 m bins of R for West Antarctica (blue dots, + signs), East Antarctica (all shelves, red dots, + signs) and East Antarctica excluding the Western Ross/McMurdo ice shelf system (orange dots, + signs). Bins containing fewer than the 40th percentile of N (1100 points for Panel a) are excluded.

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