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Calving and ice-shelf break-up processes investigated by proxy: Antarctic tabular iceberg evolution during northward drift

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2017

T. Scambos
Affiliation:
National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado, 1540 30th Street, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0449, USA E-mail: teds@nsidc.org
R. Ross
Affiliation:
Avega Systems, 59 Victoria Street, McMahons Point, Sydney, New South Wales 2060, Australia
R. Bauer
Affiliation:
National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado, 1540 30th Street, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0449, USA E-mail: teds@nsidc.org
Y. Yermolin
Affiliation:
División Glaciología, Instituto Antártico Argentino, Cerrito 1248, C1010AAZ Buenos Aires, Argentina
P. Skvarca
Affiliation:
División Glaciología, Instituto Antártico Argentino, Cerrito 1248, C1010AAZ Buenos Aires, Argentina
D. Long
Affiliation:
Department of Electrical Engineering, Brigham Young University, 459 Clyde Building, PO Box 24009, Provo, Utah 84602-4099, USA
J. Bohlander
Affiliation:
National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado, 1540 30th Street, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0449, USA E-mail: teds@nsidc.org
T. Haran
Affiliation:
National Snow and Ice Data Center, University of Colorado, 1540 30th Street, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0449, USA E-mail: teds@nsidc.org
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Abstract

Using a combination of satellite sensors, field measurements and satellite-uplinked in situ observing stations, we examine the evolution of several large icebergs drifting east of the Antarctic Peninsula towards South Georgia Island. Three styles of calving are observed during drift: ‘rift calvings’, ‘edge wasting’ and ‘rapid disintegration’. Rift calvings exploit large pre-existing fractures generated in the shelf environment and can occur at any stage of drift. Edge wasting is calving of the iceberg perimeter by numerous small edge-parallel, sliver-shaped icebergs, preserving the general shape of the main iceberg as it shrinks. This process is observed only in areas north of the sea-ice edge. Rapid disintegration, where numerous small calvings occur in rapid succession, is consistently associated with indications of surface melt saturation (surface lakes, firn-pit ponding). Freeboard measurements by ICESat indicate substantial increases in ice-thinning rates north of the sea-ice edge (from <10 m a−1 to >30 m a−1), but surface densification is shown to be an important correction (>2 m freeboard loss before the firn saturates). Edge wasting of icebergs in ‘warm’ surface water (sea-ice-free, >−1.8°C) implies a mechanism based on waterline erosion. Rapid disintegration (‘Larsen B-style’ break-up) is likely due to the effects of surface or saturated-firn water acting on pre-existing crevasses, or on wave- or tidally induced fractures. Changes in microwave backscatter of iceberg firn as icebergs drift into warmer climate and experience increased surface melt suggest a means of predicting when floating ice plates are evolving towards disintegration.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 2008
Figure 0

Fig. 1. (a, b) Automated Met-Ice-Geophysics Observation Stations (AMIGOS) were installed on the two primary study icebergs, ‘Amigosberg’ (UK211) and A22A. The images show configuration of the stations, accumulation masts, flag lines and ablation poles. The dates give the periods of operation of the two stations. (c) Aerial photo of Amigosberg, with overlay showing installation site and distance from ice edges. (d) Image map from MODIS scene showing regional view and site location of AMIGOS site on A22A. (e) Image from Amigosberg site showing one of the flag lines used for flexure observations and edge-wasting monitoring.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Map of the drift tracks of the main large icebergs studied here. Dates of initial calving, passage north of ∼63°S (northern tip of the Peninsula, and the typical sea-ice edge) and date of last position shown are given. The start date of a prolonged grounding of A43B is also shown.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Bathymetry of the southern Atlantic and Southern Ocean near the Antarctic Peninsula and South Georgia Island. Position tracks for Amigosberg and A22A iceberg are shown. This graphic was created using Generic Mapping Tools (GMT).

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Comparison of GPS positions and mean velocity uplinked from AMIGOS units on A22A and Amigosberg (UK211), with modeled motion based on tidal slopes and iceberg drift (Padman and others, 2002). Model velocities do not include any net drift; the multi-day deviation from zero for the observed iceberg drift is a measure of mean drift.

Figure 4

Fig. 5. Ship-borne, aerial, surface and ISS hand-held photographs of icebergs showing several aspects of iceberg processes: (a) large push mound on the edge of Amigosberg, viewed from the Irizar; (b) aerial view of surface fracturing typical of small icebergs in open-water region near Marambio; (c) aerial view of cavernous erosion of the A22A edge in the Scotia Sea; (d) ISS hand-held near-nadir view of A22A, 31 May 2006; (e) ISS image of edge of A22A, 31 May, showing blue perimeter indicating submerged ‘bench’ feature; (f) ISS image of same edge area on 7 June showing multiple small calvings; (g, h) ice ‘benches’ emergent on small icebergs resulting from waterline melting; and (i) in situ photograph of Amigosberg edge in Weddell Sea showing ‘berm’ bending of ice margin. ISS images are from 31 May and 7 June 2006; image identifier numbers are ISS015-E-10122, -10118 and -11254, for (d), (e) and (f) respectively.

Figure 5

Fig. 6. Firn temperature from 11 m ice core taken at A22A during AMIGOS installation on 19 March 2006. Inset: firn-pit density on same date, adjacent to firn core. Temperature errors are ±0.5°C; firn density errors are ±0.03 g cm−3. ‘Pre-drift’ refers to the period prior to the rapid northward movement of A22A beginning in early 2005.

Figure 6

Fig. 7. MODIS image of A43A on 31 March 2005, showing rapid break-up after extensive summer surface melting. Image is 75 km on a side; location is near 50°S, 20°W. (Aqua MODIS image acquired 1530 UTC on 31 March 2005.)

Figure 7

Fig. 8. Area loss and edge-wasting rates during the northward drift of A22A and Amigosberg. Units for righthand axes are area (in hectares) per kilometer of iceberg perimeter per day. This is equivalent to ‘meters per day edge retreat rate’. Note pause in rate of loss for A22A as winter sea-ice extent enveloped the iceberg. Note also rate increase after 7 November 2006 on Amigosberg, when in situ photographs of a firn pit showed evidence of water-saturated firn (see Figs 8 and 9). Date is decimal fraction of a year.

Figure 8

Fig. 9. MODIS band 1 images of the late stages of break-up of Amigosberg (top), and firn-pit photographs from the AMIGOS unit in the days leading up to the rapid increase in break-up rate (bottom).

Figure 9

Fig. 10. Air temperature, accumulation–ablation and cumulative degree-hours from AMIGOS units on A22A (a) and Amigosberg (b). Day-ofyear (DOY) axis is referred to 1 January 2006. Depth axis refers to a mark on the accumulation/ablation masts, set initially 75 cm above snow level.

Figure 10

Fig. 11. Top: ICESat elevation profile locations plotted over MODIS images of A22A acquired near the time of overpass (projection and image orientation changes among the three images). Images are all 100 km on a side. For the 10 November 2006 profile-image pair, GPS data from the AMIGOS station show that the iceberg drifted 8 km northeast between the MODIS image (1235 UTC) and the ICESat overpass (2232 UTC). The other two image-overpass pairs were within 4 hours. Bottom: Elevation profiles show in detail the mean changes in freeboard. Profiles are aligned on a rift that all three profiles crossed. ‘Comparison section’ is a 15 km long region adjacent to the rift in the iceberg interior used for determining mean freeboard changes over time.

Figure 11

Fig. 12. Backscatter evolution of four of the icebergs in this study. Melt events are indicated by large abrupt drops in backscatter. Patterns of firn evolution with increasing melt are: (A) increasing backscatter after extended melt events in early evolution; (B) decreasing backscatter after refreeze as melt events become longer and more intense due to saturation of melt layers and specular reflection; and (C) rapid disintegration event as refrozen backscatter levels reach ∼15 dB. A22A did not disintegrate during the period of observation. Amigosberg was not tracked for backscatter until March 2006. Backscatter ‘events’ of middle and late 2000 for A43A and A43B are sensor artifacts.