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Glaciological delineation of the dynamic coastline of AntarcticaJane G. Ferrigno, U.S. Geological Survey, Reston, Virginia 22092 Charles Swithinbank, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge, United Kingdom Baerbel K. Lucchitta, U.S. Geological Survey, Flagstaff, Arizona 86001 Barbara A. Seekins, U.S. Geological Survey, Woods Hole, Massachusetts 02543 Christina E. Rosanova, U.S. Geological Survey, Flagstaff, Arizona 86001 In spite of their importance to global climate and sea level, the mass balance of the antarctic ice sheet and the dynamics of the coast of Antarctica are largely unknown. In 1990, the U.S. Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Scott Polar Research Institute (SPRI), began a long-term coastal-mapping project in Antarctica that is based on analysis of Landsat images and ancillary sources (Williams et al. 1995). The project has five objectives:
MethodologyThe primary steps in the compilation of the coastal-change and glaciological maps of Antarctica are as follows:
Glaciological featuresThe Bakutis Coast (Swithinbank et al. in preparation) shows two dominant glaciological features: relatively narrow fringing ice shelves (Getz, Dotson, and Crosson Ice Shelves) and the Thwaites Glacier system (Thwaites Glacier, Thwaites Glacier Tongue, and Thwaites Iceberg Tongue). The Bakutis Coast map is divided into five ice-front segments by four islands (Dean, Siple, Carney, and Wright) located between DeVicq Glacier and Martin Peninsula. Siple Island, Carney Island, Martin Peninsula, and Bear Peninsula also contain small ice shelves separated by ice walls. Twenty-seven named and 14 unnamed outlet glaciers and ice streams flow into the ice shelves or directly into the Amundsen Sea; three other named glaciers are located in interior mountain ranges.Coastal changeAs would be expected, the ice fronts, iceberg tongues, and glacier tongues are the most dynamic and changeable features in the coastal regions of Antarctica. Seaward of the grounding line of outlet glaciers, ice streams, and ice shelves, the floating ice margin is subject to frequent and large calving events or rapid flow. Both of these situations lead to annual and decadal changes in the position of ice fronts on the order of several kilometers, even tens of kilometers in extreme cases of major calving events. Although calving does occur along ice walls, the magnitude of change on an annual to decadal basis is generally not discernible on Landsat images; therefore, ice walls can be used as relatively stable reference features against which to measure other changes along the coast; only a single observation date is given for the position of ice walls.An analysis of changes from Wrigley Gulf on the western part of the Bakutis Coast map to the western part of Pine Island Bay on the east (130-104°W) indicates the following. West and north of Dean Island, the Getz Ice Shelf advanced from 3 to 12 kilometers (km) between 11 January 1973 and 25 February 1988 across a 51-km-wide ice front. The eastern part of the tongue of DeVicq Glacier (mostly on the Saunders Coast map) receded 6 km. West and east of Carney Island small parts of the Getz Ice Shelf receded from 1 to 5 km between 22 December 1972 and 25 February 1988 and between 23 November 1973 and 25 December 1986, respectively. The 46-km-wide ice front of Dotson Ice Shelf also receded 1 to 5 km between 16 January 1973 and 23 January 1990. The largest changes, however, occurred in the Thwaites Glacier Tongue and in the adjacent Crosson Ice Shelf. From the southeastern end of the ice wall of Hamilton Ice Piedmont (about 110°W) to the ice wall west of Pine Island Glacier (about 104°W) is a distance of 186 km. Along a 62-km-wide front of Crosson Ice Shelf that includes the confluence of Smith, Pope, and Vane Glaciers, the ice front receded from 5 to 13 km between 27 December 1972 and 22 January 1988. The irregular 83-km-wide terminus of Thwaites Glacier Tongue advanced about 10 km between 27 December 1972 and 22 January 1988; between 22 January 1988 and 9 February 1989, it advanced another 2 km. Outlet-glacier, ice-stream, and ice-shelf velocitiesVelocities of floating glaciers (e.g., glacier tongues, ice streams, and ice shelves) were determined by two methods: an interactive one in which crevassed patterns are traced visually on images (Lucchitta et al. 1993) and an auto-correlation program developed by Bindschadler and Scambos (1991) and Scambos et al. (1992). Under optimum conditions, errors can be as small as ±0.02 km per year, but for most Landsat image pairs, where registration of features is accurate to only two or three pixels, the accuracy of velocity vectors is ±0.1 km per year. The larger glacier tongues and ice shelves have well-developed rift patterns that can be used for velocity measurements. From 10 to 50 measurement points were made for each glacier tongue or ice shelf. Thwaites Glacier Tongue has an average velocity of 2.8 km per year, on the basis of Landsat images acquired on 2 December 1984 (50276-14524) and 9 January 1990 (42734-14552) (Ferrigno et al. 1993). On the basis of Landsat images acquired on 13 January 1973 (1174-14325) and 22 January 1988 (42016-14343), the floating tongue of Smith Glacier moved at an average rate of 0.6 km per year, although the velocity decreased to 0.5 km per year near the grounding line. The Smith Glacier tongue increased in velocity to an average of 0.7 km per year between 19 January 1988 and 23 January 1990. Dotson Ice Shelf, into which several named (Singer, McClinton, Dorchuk, Keys, Kohler, Boschert, True, Zuniga, Brush, and Sorenson Glaciers) and other unnamed glaciers flow, has an average velocity of 0.4 km per year (Lucchitta et al. 1993, 1994).Glacier inventoryProducing a sophisticated glacier inventory of Antarctica according to the requirements of the World Glacier Monitoring Service, as part of their ongoing "World Glacier Inventory" program, is impossible with the present state of glaciological knowledge about Antarctica (Swithinbank 1980). It is, however, possible to use Landsat images, supplemented by other satellite images and photographs south of 81.5°S (e.g., recently declassified Corona photographs, Systeme Probatoire d'Observation de la Terre images, Soyuzkarta images and photographs, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration advance very-high-resolution radar images, and so forth), and available maps to produce a reasonably complete preliminary inventory of named and unnamed outlet glaciers and ice streams and also to define more accurately related glaciological features, such as ice domes, ice piedmonts, ice shelves, ice rises, ice rumples, glacier tongues, iceberg tongues, and so forth. Satellite images and photographs also permit a better distinction to be made of islands and peninsulas, physical features that were often incorrectly identified and defined on earlier maps because of the lack of appropriate data.ReferencesAlberts, F.G. (Compiler and editor). 1981. Geographic names of the Antarctic. (National Science Foundation Publication NSF 81-5.) Arlington, Virginia: U.S. Board on Geographic Names, Defense Mapping Agency, U.S. Geological Survey, and National Science Foundation.Alberts, F.G. (Compiler and editor). 1995. Geographic names of the Antarctic (2nd edition). (National Science Foundation publication NSF 95-157.) Arlington, Virginia: U.S. Board on Geographic Names, Defense Mapping Agency, U.S. Geological Survey, and National Science Foundation. Bindschadler, R.A., and T.A. Scambos. 1991. Satellite-derived-velocity field of an antarctic icestream. Science, 252(5003), 242-246. British Antarctic Survey (BAS), Scott Polar Research Institute (SPRI), and World Conservation Monitoring Centre (WCMC). 1993. Antarctic digital database user's guide and reference manual. Cambridge: Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research. [This manual accompanies a CD-ROM.] Evenden, G.I. 1990. 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Fairfax, Virginia: U.S. Board on Geographic Names, Defense Mapping Agency. Arlington, Virginia: National Science Foundation. Scambos, T.A., M.J. Dutkiewicz, J.C. Wilson, and R.A. Bindschadler. 1992. Application of image cross-correlation to the measurement of glacial velocity using satellite image data. Remote Sensing of Environment, 42, 177-186. Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR). 1980. Standard symbols for use on maps of Antarctica (2d ed.). Canberra: SCAR Working Group on Geodesy and Cartography. Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR). 1989. The role of Antarctica in global change. Scientific priorities for the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP). (Prepared by the SCAR Committee for the IGBP, April, Cambridge, England, United Kingdom.) Cambridge: ICSU Press/SCAR. Swithinbank, C. 1980. The problem of a glacier inventory in Antarctica. In World glacier inventory, proceedings of the workshop at Riederalp, Switzerland, 17-22 September 1978. (Publication number 126.) Wallingford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom: International Association of Hydrological Sciences Press. Swithinbank, C. 1985. A distant look at the cryosphere. Advances in Space Research, 5(6), 263-274. Swithinbank, C. 1988. Antarctica (with sections on the "Dry Valleys" of Victoria Land by T.J. Chinn and Landsat images of Antarctica by R.S. Williams, Jr. and J.G. Ferrigno). In R.S. Williams, Jr., and J.G. Ferrigno (Eds.), Satellite image atlas of glaciers of the world (U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1386-B). Denver: U.S. Geological Survey, Earth Science Information, Box 25046, Denver Federal Center. Swithinbank, C., R.S. Williams, Jr., J.G. Ferrigno, B.K. Lucchitta, B.A. Seekins, and C.E. Rosanova. In preparation. Coastal-change and glaciological map of the Bakutis Coast, Antarctica: 1972-1990 (U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Investigations Series Map, I-XXXX-F. Scale. 1:1,000,000). Williams, R.S., Jr., J.G. Ferrigno, C. Swithinbank, B.K. Lucchitta, and B.A. Seekins. 1995. Coastal-change and glaciological maps of Antarctica. Annals of Glaciology, 21, 284-290. |