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The basal speed of valley glaciers: an inverse approach

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2017

Martin Truffer*
Affiliation:
Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, 903 Koyukuk Drive, Fairbanks, Alaska 99775-7320, U.S.A. E-mail: truffer@gi.alaska.edu
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Abstract

Geophysical inverse methods are used to calculate the basal motion of a glacier. They are applied to a one-dimensional forward model that can be linearized to make the analysis simpler. The inverse method finds a solution that fits the data within a given error. It selects for smooth solutions to discriminate against unrealistic oscillations. The method is applied to a simple model glacier of uniform shape and thickness to test how well a given basal motion field can be reconstructed. It shows, as expected, that optimizing for smoothness lowers maxima and increases minima of the solution. A step change in basal velocity is drawn out in the inversion over a distance that is given by the half-width of a resolving function. This is typically about three times the ice thickness, but is also affected by the sampling rate of the data. The method is then applied to two glaciers where suitable data are available: Brown Glacier on Heard Island, southern Indian Ocean, and McCall Glacier in the Brooks Range, Alaska, U.S.A. The McCall results agree well with earlier estimates of basal motion.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 2009
Figure 0

Fig. 1. A forward model is used to generate “data”. The lower line is the prescribed basal speed, the upper solid line shows calculated surface speed, and the crosses show the surface speed with some random noise that is used for the inverse model. The longitudinal coordinate is normalized by the ice thickness, and the flow speed by the deformational speed that would result if the glacier was frozen to its bed.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Results of the inversion (lower solid line) compared to the originally prescribed basal speed. The inversion result is again run through the forward model (upper solid line) and compared to the “data”. Normalized units are as in Figure 1.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. The smoothest model that fits the “data” exactly. The lower curve shows the result of the inversion (solid line) compared to the originally prescribed basal speed (dotted line). The upper curve shows the “data” (crosses) and the fit of the inversion to them (solid line). Units are as in Figure 1.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Resolving function for the inversion discussed above (upper line).The half-width of this function defines a resolving scale for the inverse model. The lower line illustrates how the resolution degrades for inaccurate data.

Figure 4

Fig. 5. A step change (dash-dotted line) in basal speed was run through the forward model and sampled at a regular interval (crosses).The results were then inverted (dotted line). The inversion results fit the original data well (thick solid line). The half-width of the resolving function (thin solid line) compares well to the spreading of the step change in the inversion process.

Figure 5

Fig. 6. Data used in the inverse model for Brown Glacier. Ice thickness (a), surface slope (b), shape factor (c) and observed surface velocities (d) are shown. Ice thickness an shape factors were only determined on the lower part of the glacier.

Figure 6

Fig. 7. Results of the Brown Glacier inversion, showing the inverted basal speed (dotted line), the deformational speed without basal motion (dash-dotted line), the surface speed calculated from the inverted results (solid line), and the observed speed (crosses). Note that the results of the inversion do not match the observations exactly. The bell-shaped curves are resolving functions at two positions. Their half-width is an indication of the spatial scale over which changes can be resolved.

Figure 7

Fig. 8. Results of the McCall Glacier inversion. Inverted basal motion (dotted line), deformational speed (dash-dotted line), surface speed calculated from the inversion results (heavy thick line), and the observed surface speeds (crosses) are shown. The thin solid line shows the basal velocity that Rabus and Echelmeyer (1997) used to model surface velocities. The bell-shaped curves are resolving functions with half-widths of about 700 m (four to five ice thicknesses).