Using ice-flow models to evaluate potential sites of million year-old ice in Antarctica

Finding suitable potential sites for an undisturbed record of million-year old ice in Antarctica requires slow-moving ice (preferably an ice divide) and basal conditions that are not disturbed by large topographic variations. Furthermore, ice should be thick and cold basal conditions should prevail,...

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Main Authors: B. Van Liefferinge, F. Pattyn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2013-10-01
Series:Climate of the Past
Online Access:http://www.clim-past.net/9/2335/2013/cp-9-2335-2013.pdf
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spelling doaj-a2e15f6ad7fb45a78614ccaec1184f672020-11-24T22:28:08ZengCopernicus PublicationsClimate of the Past1814-93241814-93322013-10-01952335234510.5194/cp-9-2335-2013Using ice-flow models to evaluate potential sites of million year-old ice in AntarcticaB. Van LiefferingeF. PattynFinding suitable potential sites for an undisturbed record of million-year old ice in Antarctica requires slow-moving ice (preferably an ice divide) and basal conditions that are not disturbed by large topographic variations. Furthermore, ice should be thick and cold basal conditions should prevail, since basal melting would destroy the bottom layers. However, thick ice (needed to resolve the signal at sufficient high resolution) increases basal temperatures, which is a conflicting condition for finding a suitable drill site. In addition, slow moving areas in the center of ice sheets are also low-accumulation areas, and low accumulation reduces potential cooling of the ice through vertical advection. While boundary conditions such as ice thickness and accumulation rates are relatively well constrained, the major uncertainty in determining basal thermal conditions resides in the geothermal heat flow (GHF) underneath the ice sheet. We explore uncertainties in existing GHF data sets and their effect on basal temperatures of the Antarctic Ice Sheet, and propose an updated method based on Pattyn (2010) to improve existing GHF data sets in agreement with known basal temperatures and their gradients to reduce this uncertainty. Both complementary methods lead to a better comprehension of basal temperature sensitivity and a characterization of potential ice coring sites within these uncertainties. The combination of both modeling approaches show that the most likely oldest ice sites are situated near the divide areas (close to existing deep drilling sites, but in areas of smaller ice thickness) and across the Gamburtsev Subglacial Mountains.http://www.clim-past.net/9/2335/2013/cp-9-2335-2013.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author B. Van Liefferinge
F. Pattyn
spellingShingle B. Van Liefferinge
F. Pattyn
Using ice-flow models to evaluate potential sites of million year-old ice in Antarctica
Climate of the Past
author_facet B. Van Liefferinge
F. Pattyn
author_sort B. Van Liefferinge
title Using ice-flow models to evaluate potential sites of million year-old ice in Antarctica
title_short Using ice-flow models to evaluate potential sites of million year-old ice in Antarctica
title_full Using ice-flow models to evaluate potential sites of million year-old ice in Antarctica
title_fullStr Using ice-flow models to evaluate potential sites of million year-old ice in Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Using ice-flow models to evaluate potential sites of million year-old ice in Antarctica
title_sort using ice-flow models to evaluate potential sites of million year-old ice in antarctica
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Climate of the Past
issn 1814-9324
1814-9332
publishDate 2013-10-01
description Finding suitable potential sites for an undisturbed record of million-year old ice in Antarctica requires slow-moving ice (preferably an ice divide) and basal conditions that are not disturbed by large topographic variations. Furthermore, ice should be thick and cold basal conditions should prevail, since basal melting would destroy the bottom layers. However, thick ice (needed to resolve the signal at sufficient high resolution) increases basal temperatures, which is a conflicting condition for finding a suitable drill site. In addition, slow moving areas in the center of ice sheets are also low-accumulation areas, and low accumulation reduces potential cooling of the ice through vertical advection. While boundary conditions such as ice thickness and accumulation rates are relatively well constrained, the major uncertainty in determining basal thermal conditions resides in the geothermal heat flow (GHF) underneath the ice sheet. We explore uncertainties in existing GHF data sets and their effect on basal temperatures of the Antarctic Ice Sheet, and propose an updated method based on Pattyn (2010) to improve existing GHF data sets in agreement with known basal temperatures and their gradients to reduce this uncertainty. Both complementary methods lead to a better comprehension of basal temperature sensitivity and a characterization of potential ice coring sites within these uncertainties. The combination of both modeling approaches show that the most likely oldest ice sites are situated near the divide areas (close to existing deep drilling sites, but in areas of smaller ice thickness) and across the Gamburtsev Subglacial Mountains.
url http://www.clim-past.net/9/2335/2013/cp-9-2335-2013.pdf
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