2D and 3D Geophysical Imaging of Polygonal Patterned Ground in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica

The PPG found in the Dry Valleys is some of the oldest on the planet with ages of up to 8 million years assigned to them. The activity of some of these Antarctic PPG areas has come into question with the proposal that they may be the result of sublimation processes rather than actively re-working fr...

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Main Author: Godfrey, Myfanwy Jane
Language:en
Published: University of Canterbury. Geological Sciences 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2255
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spelling ndltd-canterbury.ac.nz-oai-ir.canterbury.ac.nz-10092-22552015-03-30T15:30:14Z2D and 3D Geophysical Imaging of Polygonal Patterned Ground in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, AntarcticaGodfrey, Myfanwy JaneThe PPG found in the Dry Valleys is some of the oldest on the planet with ages of up to 8 million years assigned to them. The activity of some of these Antarctic PPG areas has come into question with the proposal that they may be the result of sublimation processes rather than actively re-working freeze and thaw processes. Near surface geophysical methods of ground penetrating radar (GPR), resistivity tomography and electromagnetism have been applied to four Antarctic Dry Valleys polygonal patterned ground (PPG) areas; two in Victoria Valley and two in Beacon Valley. The aim was to resolve subsurface structure and activity of the PPG without disturbing the delicate permafrost soils. Multiple techniques were used so that there could be greater reliability on the interpretations of this data without the need for damaging subsurface geological calibration of the geophysics by obtaining direct subsurface data through methods such as trenching or drilling. Subsurface structure of the PPG was resolved; active layer depth, deformation of permafrost in the vicinity of contraction cracks and zones of attenuation were identified. Significant deformation in the subsurface horizons of the permafrost and associated with thermal contraction crack wedge growth was identified over PPG suggested to be formed only by sublimation in Beacon Valley, thus calling into question this interpretation of the PPG activity. The most reliable identification of subsurface features occurred with correlation between GPR and resistivity tomography results.University of Canterbury. Geological Sciences2009-03-29T22:36:50Z2009-03-29T22:36:50Z2008Electronic thesis or dissertationTexthttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/2255enAlso available through inter-library loan is a "Companion CD" which contains two digital appendices iv & vii.NZCUCopyright Myfanwy Jane Godfreyhttp://library.canterbury.ac.nz/thesis/etheses_copyright.shtml
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
description The PPG found in the Dry Valleys is some of the oldest on the planet with ages of up to 8 million years assigned to them. The activity of some of these Antarctic PPG areas has come into question with the proposal that they may be the result of sublimation processes rather than actively re-working freeze and thaw processes. Near surface geophysical methods of ground penetrating radar (GPR), resistivity tomography and electromagnetism have been applied to four Antarctic Dry Valleys polygonal patterned ground (PPG) areas; two in Victoria Valley and two in Beacon Valley. The aim was to resolve subsurface structure and activity of the PPG without disturbing the delicate permafrost soils. Multiple techniques were used so that there could be greater reliability on the interpretations of this data without the need for damaging subsurface geological calibration of the geophysics by obtaining direct subsurface data through methods such as trenching or drilling. Subsurface structure of the PPG was resolved; active layer depth, deformation of permafrost in the vicinity of contraction cracks and zones of attenuation were identified. Significant deformation in the subsurface horizons of the permafrost and associated with thermal contraction crack wedge growth was identified over PPG suggested to be formed only by sublimation in Beacon Valley, thus calling into question this interpretation of the PPG activity. The most reliable identification of subsurface features occurred with correlation between GPR and resistivity tomography results.
author Godfrey, Myfanwy Jane
spellingShingle Godfrey, Myfanwy Jane
2D and 3D Geophysical Imaging of Polygonal Patterned Ground in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
author_facet Godfrey, Myfanwy Jane
author_sort Godfrey, Myfanwy Jane
title 2D and 3D Geophysical Imaging of Polygonal Patterned Ground in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_short 2D and 3D Geophysical Imaging of Polygonal Patterned Ground in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_full 2D and 3D Geophysical Imaging of Polygonal Patterned Ground in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_fullStr 2D and 3D Geophysical Imaging of Polygonal Patterned Ground in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed 2D and 3D Geophysical Imaging of Polygonal Patterned Ground in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica
title_sort 2d and 3d geophysical imaging of polygonal patterned ground in the mcmurdo dry valleys, antarctica
publisher University of Canterbury. Geological Sciences
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10092/2255
work_keys_str_mv AT godfreymyfanwyjane 2dand3dgeophysicalimagingofpolygonalpatternedgroundinthemcmurdodryvalleysantarctica
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