Data and Code for "Comprehensive Radar Mapping of Malaspina Glacier (Sít' Tlein), Alaska—The World's Largest Piedmont Glacier—Reveals Potential for Instability" ...
Malaspina Glacier, located on the coast of southern Alaska, is the world's largest piedmont glacier. A narrow ice-cored foreland zone undergoing rapid thermokarst erosion separates the glacier from the relatively warm waters of the Gulf of Alaska. Glacier-wide thinning rates for Malaspina are g...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
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Format: | Dataset |
Language: | unknown |
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University of Arizona Research Data Repository
2023
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://dx.doi.org/10.25422/azu.data.17054063.v2 https://arizona.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Data_and_Code_for_Comprehensive_Radar_Mapping_of_Malaspina_Glacier_S_t_Tlein_Alaska_the_World_s_Largest_Piedmont_Glacier_Reveals_Potential_for_Instability_/17054063/2 |
Summary: | Malaspina Glacier, located on the coast of southern Alaska, is the world's largest piedmont glacier. A narrow ice-cored foreland zone undergoing rapid thermokarst erosion separates the glacier from the relatively warm waters of the Gulf of Alaska. Glacier-wide thinning rates for Malaspina are greater than 1 m/yr, and previous geophysical investigations indicated that bed elevation exceeds 300 m below sea level in some places. These observations together give rise to the question of glacial stability. To address this question, glacier evolution models are dependent upon detailed observations of Malaspina's subglacial topography. Here, we map 2,000 line-km of the glacier's bed using airborne radar sounding data collected by NASA's Operation IceBridge. When compared to gridded radar measurements, we find that glaciological models overestimate Malaspina's volume by more than 30%. While we report a mean bed elevation 100 m greater than previous models, we find that Malaspina inhabits a broad basin largely ... |
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