{A new 1 km digital elevation model of the Antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – Part 1: Data and methods

Digital elevation models (DEMs) of Antarctica have been derived, previously, from satellite radar altimetry (SRA) and limited terrestrial data. Near the ice sheet margins and in other areas of steep relief the SRA data tend to have relatively poor coverage and accuracy. To remedy this and to extend...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bamber, J, Gomez-Dans, JL, Griggs, JA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2008
Subjects:
dem
ers
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/64970/
id ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:64970
record_format openpolar
spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:64970 2023-05-15T13:34:28+02:00 {A new 1 km digital elevation model of the Antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – Part 1: Data and methods Bamber, J Gomez-Dans, JL Griggs, JA 2008 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/64970/ unknown The Cryosphere , 2 (3) pp. 101-111. (2008) antarctica dem ers cryosphere icesat glas Article 2008 ftucl 2016-01-15T01:45:41Z Digital elevation models (DEMs) of Antarctica have been derived, previously, from satellite radar altimetry (SRA) and limited terrestrial data. Near the ice sheet margins and in other areas of steep relief the SRA data tend to have relatively poor coverage and accuracy. To remedy this and to extend the coverage beyond the latitudinal limit of the SRA missions (81.5° S) we have combined laser altimeter measurements from the Geosciences Laser Altimeter System onboard ICESat with SRA data from the geodetic phase of the ERS-1 satellite mission. The former provide decimetre vertical accuracy but with poor spatial coverage. The latter have excellent spatial coverage but a poorer vertical accuracy. By combining the radar and laser data using an optimal approach we have maximised the vertical accuracy and spatial resolution of the DEM and minimised the number of grid cells with an interpolated elevation estimate. We assessed the optimum resolution for producing a DEM based on a trade-off between resolution and interpolated cells, which was found to be 1 km. This resulted in just under 35% of grid cells having an interpolated value. The accuracy of the final DEM was assessed using a suite of independent airborne altimeter data and used to produce an error map. The RMS error in the new DEM was found to be roughly half that of the best previous 5 km resolution, SRA-derived DEM, with marked improvements in the steeper marginal and mountainous areas and between 81.5 and 86° S. The DEM contains a wealth of information related to ice flow. This is particularly apparent for the two largest ice shelves – the Filchner-Ronne and Ross – where the surface expression of flow of ice streams and outlet glaciers can be traced from the grounding line to the calving front. The surface expression of subglacial lakes and other basal features are also illustrated. We also use the DEM to derive new estimates of balance velocities and ice divide locations. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Ice Sheet Ice Shelves The Cryosphere University College London: UCL Discovery Antarctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language unknown
topic antarctica
dem
ers
cryosphere
icesat
glas
spellingShingle antarctica
dem
ers
cryosphere
icesat
glas
Bamber, J
Gomez-Dans, JL
Griggs, JA
{A new 1 km digital elevation model of the Antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – Part 1: Data and methods
topic_facet antarctica
dem
ers
cryosphere
icesat
glas
description Digital elevation models (DEMs) of Antarctica have been derived, previously, from satellite radar altimetry (SRA) and limited terrestrial data. Near the ice sheet margins and in other areas of steep relief the SRA data tend to have relatively poor coverage and accuracy. To remedy this and to extend the coverage beyond the latitudinal limit of the SRA missions (81.5° S) we have combined laser altimeter measurements from the Geosciences Laser Altimeter System onboard ICESat with SRA data from the geodetic phase of the ERS-1 satellite mission. The former provide decimetre vertical accuracy but with poor spatial coverage. The latter have excellent spatial coverage but a poorer vertical accuracy. By combining the radar and laser data using an optimal approach we have maximised the vertical accuracy and spatial resolution of the DEM and minimised the number of grid cells with an interpolated elevation estimate. We assessed the optimum resolution for producing a DEM based on a trade-off between resolution and interpolated cells, which was found to be 1 km. This resulted in just under 35% of grid cells having an interpolated value. The accuracy of the final DEM was assessed using a suite of independent airborne altimeter data and used to produce an error map. The RMS error in the new DEM was found to be roughly half that of the best previous 5 km resolution, SRA-derived DEM, with marked improvements in the steeper marginal and mountainous areas and between 81.5 and 86° S. The DEM contains a wealth of information related to ice flow. This is particularly apparent for the two largest ice shelves – the Filchner-Ronne and Ross – where the surface expression of flow of ice streams and outlet glaciers can be traced from the grounding line to the calving front. The surface expression of subglacial lakes and other basal features are also illustrated. We also use the DEM to derive new estimates of balance velocities and ice divide locations.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Bamber, J
Gomez-Dans, JL
Griggs, JA
author_facet Bamber, J
Gomez-Dans, JL
Griggs, JA
author_sort Bamber, J
title {A new 1 km digital elevation model of the Antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – Part 1: Data and methods
title_short {A new 1 km digital elevation model of the Antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – Part 1: Data and methods
title_full {A new 1 km digital elevation model of the Antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – Part 1: Data and methods
title_fullStr {A new 1 km digital elevation model of the Antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – Part 1: Data and methods
title_full_unstemmed {A new 1 km digital elevation model of the Antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – Part 1: Data and methods
title_sort {a new 1 km digital elevation model of the antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – part 1: data and methods
publishDate 2008
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/64970/
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelves
The Cryosphere
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Ice Sheet
Ice Shelves
The Cryosphere
op_source The Cryosphere , 2 (3) pp. 101-111. (2008)
_version_ 1766053119187222528