Localization of the gravity field and the signature of glacial rebound

The negative free-air gravity anomaly centred on Hudson Bay, Canada, shows a remarkable correlation with the location of the Laurentide ice sheet, suggesting that this gravity anomaly is the result of incomplete post-glacial rebound. This region, however, is also underlain by higher-than-average man...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature
Main Authors: Simons, Mark, Hager, Bradford H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Nature Publishing Group 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://authors.library.caltech.edu/38876/
https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20130610-102157743
Description
Summary:The negative free-air gravity anomaly centred on Hudson Bay, Canada, shows a remarkable correlation with the location of the Laurentide ice sheet, suggesting that this gravity anomaly is the result of incomplete post-glacial rebound. This region, however, is also underlain by higher-than-average mantle seismic velocities, suggesting that the gravity low might result instead from dynamic topography associated with convective downwellings. Here we analyse the global gravity field as a simultaneous function of geographic location and spectral content. We find that the Hudson Bay gravity low is unique, with anomalously high amplitude in the spectral band where the power from the Laurentide ice load is greatest and the relaxation times predicted for viable models of viscous relaxation are longest. We estimate that about half of the Hudson Bay gravity anomaly is the result of incomplete post-glacial rebound, and derive a mantle viscosity model that explains both this gravity signature and the characteristic uplift rates for the central Laurentide and Fennoscandian regions. This model has a jump in viscosity at 670 km depth, comparable to that in dynamic models of the geoid highs over subducted slabs, but lacks a low-viscosity asthenosphere, consistent with a higher viscosity in the upper mantle beneath shields than in oceanic regions.