Collaborative Research: Using Fracture Patterns and Ice Thickness to Study the History and Dynamics of Grounding Line Migration and Shutdown of Kamb and Whillans Ice Streams

Federal Geographic Data Committee (FGDC) Metadata:


Identification_Information:
Citation:
Citation_Information:
Originator: Unknown
Publication_Date: Unknown
Title: Collaborative Research: Using Fracture Patterns and Ice Thickness to Study the History and Dynamics of Grounding Line Migration and Shutdown of Kamb and Whillans Ice Streams
Description:
Abstract:
The work is in collaboration with co-PI Christina Hulbe and at Portland State University. In our previous work we were able to image, map, and interpret streak lines (flow trajectories) on the Ross Ice Shelf and demonstrate, using numerical simulations, that this pattern of flow-related features required significant changes in flow direction in the outflows of a number of ice streams on the Siple Coast of West Antarctica. In the present project, we have expanded the suite of features to include fracture patterns mapped from satellite imagery, expanded the modeling work to capture the impact of grounding and ungrounding of ice in the mouths of ice streams, and we have worked to constrain stop and start cycles recorded by the features out in the Ross Ice Shelf. A summary of results, starting with the abstract of the paper that is out in JGR Earth Surfaces (see publications record in this DIF): "Flow features on the surface of the Ross Ice Shelf, West Antarctica, record two episodes of ice stream stagnation and reactivation within the last 1000 years. We document these events using maps of streaklines emerging from individual ice streams made using visible band imagery, together with numerical models of ice shelf flow. Forward model experiments demonstrate that only a limited set of discharge scenarios could have produced the current streakline configuration. According to our analysis, Whillans Ice Stream ceased rapid flow about 850 calendar years ago and restarted about 400 years later and MacAyeal Ice Stream either stopped or slowed significantly between 800 and 700 years ago, restarting about 150 years later. Until now, ice-stream scenarios emphasized runaway retreat or stagnation on millennial time scales. Here, we identify a new scenario: century-scale stagnation and reactivation cycles, as well as lateral communication with adjacent ice streams through thickness changes on lightly grounded ice plains. This introduces uncertainty into predictions for future sea-level withdrawls by the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, which are based in part on recent slowing of Whillans Ice Stream and the stagnant condition of Kamb Ice Stream." This paper documents the evidence for delimiting the source regions (provenance) of ice now in the shelf; for bracketing the possible discharge scenarios that could have produced the patterns captured in the shelf, and shows that it is difficult to reproduce these patterns with a model without stopping and restarting individual streams. The modeling facilitated by Co-PI Hulbe’s system has allowed us to cover a range of possible scenarios, and in the process to learn about other aspects of the behavior of this system. The flow variability recorded in the ice shelf provides an important reference history against which current changes can be put in context. Some other findings (some of them in this paper, some from the last year of the project): Major, rapid, bi-directional translations of the grounding line have occurred, are common in the recent past, and are very likely to be going on now. This conclusion is required by the changes in flow and crevassing recorded in the ice shelf. It is a direct consequence of changing ice stream discharge across a low-slope grounding zone – small changes in ice thickness can produce large horizontal changes in grounding line location. Although there is limited knowledge of the cavity shape under the Ross Ice Shelf, the gently sloping floor downstream of the Siple Coast ice streams is fairly well constrained. Thickness variations out on the Ross Ice Shelf from ICESAT data (courtesy of Christopher Shuman) show strong gradients along and across flow that should decay rapidly over time; their presence suggests recent ungrounding in several areas. Early model work by MacAyeal on the thickness signatures to be expected on an ice shelf from an ice stream shutdown are large only local to the grounding line – and we in fact see a combination of thickness changes and flow provenance that reveals the impact of changes in the mouths of ice streams, but decays farther out on the shelf. Ice stream restarting is required by the lack of Whillans ice stream ice out in the ice shelf; this corresponds in estimated time with changes upstream of Engelhardt Ice Ridge (Scambos and Conway). The time available for restarting is significantly shorter than the millennium-length period required to substantially thicken the ice and change either the basal thermal gradient or basal shear stress, which has been the prevailing model of how streams may restart. This strongly points to more variable parts of the system as possible mechanisms – basal water being the most likely. Basal water movement is very common on Whillans, Bindschadler and MacAyeal ice streams based on time series of ICESat laser altimeter data, which show meters of vertical elevation change over multiple months for a series of lakes (Fricker et al). This type of water flow could restart a stopped stream, if it could be effective in the right places. The implications of this for possible field measurements that would document the process will require more work. The complex layers of dirty and clean ice seen at the base of the Caltech borehole on Kamb ice stream may reflect intermittent freeze-on and restarting of flow in this area. The seemingly disparate conclusions of the work of Catania et al, and Catania and Hulbe, from surface-based radar profiling of the past margins and floating regions in the lower reaches of Kamb ice stream, and Anandakrishnan, Bindschadler, and more recently Weins about the twice-daily episodic stick-slip motion on the ice plain of Whillans ice stream can be connected based on an analysis of the detailed topography of these regions. Many of the conclusions of Catania et al about the recent history of the ice at the mouth of Kamb ice stream are borne out by this comparison, though relating the features produced by basal melting at the edges of Siple Dome and Engelhardt ice rise to old grounding lines is problematic given the amount of vertical relief along the length of these features today. The nucleation points of the slip events, centered around Ice Raft A in the ice plain of Whillans ice stream is characterized by local rises which can reach 10+ meters but are features only a kilometer across. These are likely produced when ice flows across a bed feature that inhibits sliding. On longer time scales, this detailed topography provides a quantitative picture of the flow variations that are also shown in the modeling of ice stream start/stop behavior and grounding line migration by Hulbe at Portland State University; further analysis of the combination of these data should yield additional insight.
Purpose:
Not Available
Supplemental_Information:
REFERENCE: Hulbe, C; Fahnestock, M. "Century-scale discharge stagnation and reactivation of the Ross ice streams, West Antarctica," JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-EARTH SURFACE, v.112, 2007
Time_Period_of_Content:
Time_Period_Information:
Range_of_Dates/Times:
Beginning_Date: 19970101
Ending_Date: 20040228
Currentness_Reference:Unknown
Status:
Progress: In Work
Maintenance_and_Update_Frequency: As needed
Spatial_Domain:
Description_of_Geographic_Extent:
Bounding_Coordinates:
West_Bounding_Coordinate: 180.0
East_Bounding_Coordinate: -130.0
North_Bounding_Coordinate: -70.0
South_Bounding_Coordinate: -86.0
Keywords:
Theme:
Theme_Keyword_Thesaurus: GCMD SCIENCE PARAMETERS
Theme_Keyword_Thesaurus: GCMD PLATFORM
Theme_Keyword_Thesaurus: GCMD INSTRUMENT
Theme_Keyword_Thesaurus: PROJECT
Theme_Keyword_Thesaurus: ANCILLARY KEYWORDS
Theme_Keyword_Thesaurus: ISO TOPIC CATEGORY
Theme_Keyword_Thesaurus: DATA SET LANGUAGE
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > GLACIERS
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > SNOW/ICE > ICE DEPTH/THICKNESS
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > SNOW/ICE > ICE MOTION
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > ICE SHEETS
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > SNOW/ICE
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > ABLATION ZONES/ACCUMULATION ZONES
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > GLACIER MASS BALANCE/ICE SHEET MASS BALANCE
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > GLACIER THICKNESS/ICE SHEET THICKNESS
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > GLACIER TOPOGRAPHY/ICE SHEET TOPOGRAPHY
Theme_Keyword: EARTH SCIENCE > CRYOSPHERE > GLACIERS/ICE SHEETS > GLACIER MOTION/ICE SHEET MOTION
Theme_Keyword: ICESAT > ICE, CLOUD AND LAND ELEVATION SATELLITE
Theme_Keyword: SATELLITES
Theme_Keyword: MODIS > MODERATE-RESOLUTION IMAGING SPECTRORADIOMETER
Theme_Keyword: NSF/OPP > OFFICE OF POLAR PROGRAMS, NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Theme_Keyword: Grounding Line
Theme_Keyword: Grounding Line Migration
Theme_Keyword: Kamb Ice Stream
Theme_Keyword: Whillans Ice Stream
Theme_Keyword: Ice Stream Outlets
Theme_Keyword: Basal Thermal Gradient
Theme_Keyword: Icesat
Theme_Keyword: Ice-stream Discharge
Theme_Keyword: Ice Rise
Theme_Keyword: Antarctica
Theme_Keyword: Ross Ice Shelf
Theme_Keyword: West Antarctic Ice Sheet
Theme_Keyword: Fracture Patterns
Theme_Keyword: Ice Thickness
Theme_Keyword: Flow Features
Theme_Keyword: Satellite Image Mosaics
Theme_Keyword: Numerical Models
Theme_Keyword: Fracture Propagation
Theme_Keyword: CLIMATOLOGY/METEOROLOGY/ATMOSPHERE
Theme_Keyword: ENGLISH
Place:
Place_Keyword_Thesaurus: GCMD
Place_Keyword: CONTINENT > ANTARCTICA
Place_Keyword: GEOGRAPHIC REGION > POLAR
Access_Constraints: Not Available
Use_Constraints:
Not Available
Point_of_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Person_Primary:
Contact_Person: MARK FAHNESTOCK
Contact_Person_Primary:
Contact_Person: CHRISTINA HULBE
Contact_Position: INVESTIGATOR
Contact_Position: INVESTIGATOR
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: Mailing and Physical Address
Address: University of New Hampshire
Address: 39 College Road
City: Durham
State_or_Province: NH
Postal_Code: 03824-3525
Country: USA
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: Mailing and Physical Address
Address: Portland State University
Address: Department of Geology
Address: PO Box 751
City: Portland
State_or_Province: OR
Postal_Code: 97202
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 603-862-0322
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 503-725-3388
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: mark.fahnestock@unh.edu
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: chulbe@pdx.edu
Back to Top
Data_Quality_Information:
Attribute_Accuracy:
Attribute_Accuracy_Report:
Not Available
Logical_Consistency_Report:
Not Available
Completeness_Report:
Not Available
Lineage:
Process_Step:
Process_Description:
Not Available
Process_Date: Unknown
Back to Top
Spatial_Reference_Information:
Back to Top
Distribution_Information:
Distributor:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization: NSIDC > National Snow and Ice Data Center
Contact_Person: NSIDC USER SERVICES
Contact_Position: DATA CENTER CONTACT
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: Mailing and Physical Address
Address: National Snow and Ice Data Center
Address: CIRES, 449 UCB
Address: University of Colorado
City: Boulder
State_or_Province: CO
Postal_Code: 80309-0449
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: +1 (303) 492-6199
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: +1 (303) 492-2468
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: nsidc@nsidc.org
Distributor:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Organization_Primary:
Contact_Organization: NSIDC_AGDC > NSIDC Antarctic Glaciological Data Center
Contact_Person: ROB BAUER
Contact_Position: DATA CENTER CONTACT
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: Mailing and Physical Address
Address: University of Colorado
Address: Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences
Address: CIRES 449 UCB
City: Boulder
State_or_Province: CO
Postal_Code: 80309
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: 303-492-2378
Contact_Facsimile_Telephone: 303-492-2468
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: bauer@nsidc.org
Resource_Description: fahnestock_0440636
Distribution_Liability:
Not Available
Standard_Order_Process:
Digital_Form:
Digital_Transfer_Information:
Format_Name: Not Available
Digital_Transfer_Option:
Online_Option:
Computer_Contact_Information:
Network_Address:
Network_Resource_Name:
http://nsidc.org
Access_Instructions:
DATA CENTER URL
Online_Option:
Computer_Contact_Information:
Network_Address:
Network_Resource_Name:
http://nsidc.org/agdc/
Access_Instructions:
DATA CENTER URL
Digital_Transfer_Option:
Online_Option:
Computer_Contact_Information:
Network_Address:
Network_Resource_Name:
http://planet.sr.unh.edu/ross/ross.kml
Access_Instructions:
Download KML file that can be opened in Google Earth
Digital_Transfer_Option:
Online_Option:
Computer_Contact_Information:
Network_Address:
Network_Resource_Name:
http://planet.sr.unh.edu/ross/
Access_Instructions:
Access maps of surface features on the Ross related to this investigation and interpretations of ice provenance interpreted from these features, view them in relation to the MODIS mosaic of Antarctica. Most of these maps are published in the related JGR-Earth Surfaces article.
Digital_Transfer_Option:
Online_Option:
Computer_Contact_Information:
Network_Address:
Network_Resource_Name:
http://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward.do?AwardN...
Access_Instructions:
NSF OPP Award Abstract #0440636
Fees: Not Available
Back to Top
Metadata_Reference_Information:
Metadata_Date: 20080925
Metadata_Review_Date: 20090108
Metadata_Contact:
Contact_Information:
Contact_Person_Primary:
Contact_Person: GCMD User Support Office
Contact_Organization: NASA Global Change Master Directory
Contact_Address:
Address_Type: Mailing and Physical Address
Address: Not Available
City: Lanham
State_or_Province: MD
Postal_Code: 20706
Country: USA
Contact_Voice_Telephone: Not Available
Contact_Electronic_Mail_Address: gcmduso@gcmd.gsfc.nasa.gov
Metadata_Standard_Name: FGDC Content Standards for Digital Geospatial Metadata
Metadata_Standard_Version: FGDC-STD-001-1998
Metadata_Time_Convention: local time
Back to Top
[ Update this Record ]


Link to Web Site