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  5. Sea Tide Influence on Ice Flow of David Drygalski’s Ice Tongue Inferred from Geodetic GNSS Observations and SAR Offset Tracking Analysis
 
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Sea Tide Influence on Ice Flow of David Drygalski’s Ice Tongue Inferred from Geodetic GNSS Observations and SAR Offset Tracking Analysis

Author(s)
Vittuari, Luca  
Zanutta, Antonio  
Lugli, Andrea  
Martelli, Leonardo  
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV), Sezione Bologna, Bologna, Italia  
Dubbini, Marco  
Language
English
Obiettivo Specifico
OSA2: Evoluzione climatica: effetti e loro mitigazione
Status
Published
JCR Journal
JCR Journal
Journal
Remote Sensing  
Issue/vol(year)
/15 (2023)
ISSN
2072-4292
Publisher
MDPI
Pages (printed)
2037
Date Issued
2023
DOI
10.3390/rs15082037
Alternative Location
https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/15/8/2037
URI
https://www.earth-prints.org/handle/2122/17053
Subjects

Antarctic glaciology;...

Abstract
David Glacier and Drygalski Ice Tongue are massive glaciers in Victoria Land, Antarctica. The ice from the East Antarctic Ice Sheet is drained through the former, and then discharged into the western Ross Sea through the latter. David Drygalski is the largest outlet glacier in Northern Victoria Land, floating kilometers out to sea. The floating and grounded part of the David Glacier are the main focus of this article. During the XXI Italian Antarctic Expedition (2005–2006), within the framework of the National Antarctic Research Programme (PNRA), two GNSS stations were installed at different points: the first close to the grounding line of David Glacier, and the second approximately 40 km downstream of the first one. Simultaneous data logging was performed by both GNSS stations for 24 days. In the latest data processing, the kinematic PPP technique was adopted to evaluate the dominant diurnal components and the very small semi-diurnal variations in ice motion induced by the ocean tide and the mean ice flow rates of both GNSS stations. Comparison of the GNSS time series with predicted ocean tide calculated from harmonic coefficients of the nearest tide gauge stations, installed at Cape Roberts and Mario Zucchelli Station, highlight different local response of the glacier to ocean tide, with a minor amplitude of vertical motion at a point partially anchored at the bedrock close to the grounding line. During low tide, the velocity of the ice flow reaches its daily maximum, in accordance with the direction of seawater outflow from the fjord into the ocean, while the greatest daily tidal excursion generates an increase in the horizontal ice flow velocity. With the aim to extend the analysis in spatial terms, five COSMO-SkyMED Stripmap scenes were processed. The comparison of the co-registered offset tracking rates, obtained from SAR images, with the GNSS estimation shows good agreement.
Type
article
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remotesensing-15-02037.pdf

Description
Open Access Published Article
Size

11.86 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

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