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  • 300 m snow streamer with 96 gimballed 30 Hz vertical compressional wave (P-wave) sensors; ANT-Land_2016/17_FISP; AWI Antarctic Land Expedition; Binary Object; Binary Object (File Size); Event label; Filchner Ice Shelf Project; File content; FISP; FISP_2016-2017_20170501; FISP_2016-2017_20170502; FISP_2016-2017_20170503; FISP_2016-2017_20170504; FISP_2016-2017_20170506; Ice-shelf Channels; profile I; profile II; profile III; profile IV; profile V; Snow streamer; SSTREAM  (1)
  • radio‐echo sounding  (1)
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Keywords
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Years
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-04-20
    Description: Support Force Glacier (SFG) is a large ice stream feeding into the Filchner Ice Shelf. The active seismic survey is recorded at the sheet-shelf transition of SFG. We map the bed while grounded, the ocean cavity around a surface channel at the ice shelf and its counterpart at the base, the basal channel, and the seabed. The survey consists of 5 seismic reflection profiles, 2 along-flow profiles and 3 across-flow profiles. The 2.42GB seismic data were recorded with a 300 m long streamer consisting of 96 30Hz p-wave sensors. The sample rate is 0.5 ms, record length 3000 ms. The data is single fold, shot spacing is 150 m: line name: profile TC paper: direction: #shots: - 20170501 profile I along-flow 291 shots - 20170502 profile III across-flow 28 shots - 20170503 profile II along-flow 71 shots - 20170504 profile IV across-flow 40 shots - 20170506 profile V across-flow 50 shots Presented are for each line (20170501 used as example): - The raw shots: 20170501_RAW_SHOTS_EDITS_GEOM.segy - The Kirchhoff migrated and depth converted profiles: 20170501stat_TXmig_Zconv.segy - The shot x,y,z coordinates in longitude, latitude and surface height in meters above sea level (z, WGS84 ellipsoid): 20170501_GPS.txt
    Keywords: 300 m snow streamer with 96 gimballed 30 Hz vertical compressional wave (P-wave) sensors; ANT-Land_2016/17_FISP; AWI Antarctic Land Expedition; Binary Object; Binary Object (File Size); Event label; Filchner Ice Shelf Project; File content; FISP; FISP_2016-2017_20170501; FISP_2016-2017_20170502; FISP_2016-2017_20170503; FISP_2016-2017_20170504; FISP_2016-2017_20170506; Ice-shelf Channels; profile I; profile II; profile III; profile IV; profile V; Snow streamer; SSTREAM
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 54 data points
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-07-21
    Description: The ice stream geometry and large ice surface velocities at the onset region of the Northeast Greenland Ice Stream (NEGIS) are not yet well reproduced by ice sheet models. The quantification of basal sliding and a parametrization of basal conditions remains a major gap. In this study, we assess the basal conditions of the onset region of the NEGIS in a systematic analysis of airborne ultra‐wideband radar data. We evaluate basal roughness and basal return echoes in the context of the current ice stream geometry and ice surface velocity. We observe a change from a smooth to a rougher bed where the ice stream widens, and a distinct roughness anisotropy, indicating a preferred orientation of subglacial structures. In the upstream region, the excess ice mass flux through the shear margins is evacuated by ice flow acceleration and along‐flow stretching of the ice. At the downstream part, the generally rougher bed topography correlates with a decrease in flow acceleration and lateral variations in ice surface velocity. Together with basal water routing pathways, this hints to two different zones in this part of the NEGIS: the upstream region collecting water, with a reduced basal traction, and downstream, where the ice stream is slowing down and is widening on a rougher bed, with a distribution of basal water toward the shear margins. Our findings support the hypothesis that the NEGIS is strongly interconnected to the subglacial water system in its onset region, but also to the subglacial substrate and morphology.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: The Northeast Greenland Ice Stream (NEGIS) transports a large amount of ice mass from the interior of the Greenland Ice Sheet (GrIS) toward the ocean. The extent and geometry of the NEGIS are difficult to reproduce in current ice sheet models because many boundary conditions, such as the properties of the ice base, are not well known. In this study, we present new characteristics of the ice base from the onset region of the NEGIS derived by airborne radio‐echo sounding data. Our data yield a smooth and increasingly lubricated bed in the upstream part of our survey area, which enables the ice to accelerate. Our results confirm the hypothesis that the position of the ice stream boundaries are coupled to the subglacial hydrology system.
    Description: Key Points: Basal roughness at the onset of the NEGIS hints to a geomorphic anisotropy and a change in the geomorphological regime. Basal water is funneled into the ice stream upstream and redistributed toward the shear margins further downstream. A smooth and progressively lubricated bed reduces basal traction and favors the acceleration of the NEGIS at its onset.
    Description: A. P. Møller Foundation
    Description: US National Science Foundation
    Description: Alfred Wegener Institute
    Description: National Institute of Polar Research and Arctic Challenge for Sustainability
    Description: University of Bergen and Bergen Research Foundation
    Description: Swiss National Science Foundation
    Description: French Polar Institute Paul‐Emile Victor
    Description: Chinese Academy of Sciences and Beijing Normal University
    Description: NASA Operation IceBridge
    Description: NSF
    Keywords: 551.34 ; basal roughness ; bed conditions ; Greenland Ice Sheet ; ice stream ; Northeast Greenland Ice Stream ; radio‐echo sounding
    Type: article
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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