Grounding-Zone Flow Variability of Priestley Glacier, Antarctica, in a Diurnal Tidal Regime


Contact
niklas.neckel [ at ] awi.de

Abstract

Abstract Tidal modulation of ice streams and their adjacent ice shelves is a real-world experiment to understand ice-dynamic processes. We observe the dynamics of Priestley Glacier, Antarctica, using Terrestrial Radar Interferometry (TRI) and GNSS. Ocean tides are predominantly diurnal but horizontal GNSS displacements also oscillate semi-diurnally. The oscillations are strongest in the ice shelf and tidal signatures decay near-linearly in the TRI data over >10 km upstream of the grounding line. Tidal flexing is observed >6 km upstream of the grounding line including cm-scale uplift. Tidal grounding line migration is small and <40% of the ice thickness. The frequency doubling of horizontal displacements relative to the ocean tides is consistent with variable ice-shelf buttressing demonstrated with a visco-elastic Maxwell model. Taken together, this supports previously hypothesized flexural ice softening in the grounding-zone through tides and offers new observational constraints for the role of ice rheology in ice-shelf buttressing.



Item Type
Article
Authors
Divisions
Primary Division
Programs
Primary Topic
Helmholtz Cross Cutting Activity (2021-2027)
N/A
Publication Status
Published
Eprint ID
54873
DOI 10.1029/2021GL093853

Cite as
Drews, R. , Wild, C. T. , Marsh, O. J. , Rack, W. , Ehlers, T. A. , Neckel, N. and Helm, V. (2021): Grounding-Zone Flow Variability of Priestley Glacier, Antarctica, in a Diurnal Tidal Regime , Geophysical Research Letters, 48 (20), e2021GL093853 . doi: 10.1029/2021GL093853


Download
[thumbnail of 2021GL093853.pdf]
Preview
PDF
2021GL093853.pdf

Download (2MB) | Preview

Share
Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email


Citation

Geographical region

Research Platforms
N/A

Campaigns
N/A

Funded by
689443


Actions
Edit Item Edit Item