Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI

Floating ice shelves cover ~1.5million km2 of Antarctica’s area, and are important as they buttress land ice, which limits sea level rise. In recent years, several such Antarctic ice shelves have collapsed or retreated. Supraglacial lakes are linked to warm periods and influence the stability of ice...

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Main Author: Barnes, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Lancaster University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/147999/
https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/147999/1/2020barnesMRes.pdf
https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1111
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftulancaster:oai:eprints.lancs.ac.uk:147999 2023-12-17T10:21:19+01:00 Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI Barnes, Thomas 2020-10-06 text https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/147999/ https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/147999/1/2020barnesMRes.pdf https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1111 en eng Lancaster University https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/147999/1/2020barnesMRes.pdf Barnes, Thomas (2020) Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI. Masters thesis, UNSPECIFIED. creative_commons_attribution_4_0_international_license Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2020 ftulancaster https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1111 2023-11-23T23:19:26Z Floating ice shelves cover ~1.5million km2 of Antarctica’s area, and are important as they buttress land ice, which limits sea level rise. In recent years, several such Antarctic ice shelves have collapsed or retreated. Supraglacial lakes are linked to warm periods and influence the stability of ice shelves through hydrofracture. Climate change induced temperature increases may increase lake presence, thus decreasing stability. Monitoring ‘at risk’ ice shelves is therefore important to understand their likelihood of fracture. George VI is located on the western Antarctic Peninsula, covering ~23200 km2, and has had high lake densities in its northern sector. This study analyses 31 years of imagery to understand the long-term and seasonal dynamics of lake evolution. This is the first study to characterise supraglacial lake variability in the long- and short-term on George VI, thus producing a comprehensive picture of lake evolution. Here I use a semi-automated technique to map lakes in >160 satellite images from Sentinel 2 and Landsat 4-8. Additional influences on stability and lake presence are gauged using climatic and glaciological data. Analysis of recent imagery shows that the apparent high lake density in summer 2020 is not unique on George VI, with 1989-90 having similar densities persisting over ≥3 years. Decadal average temperature and annual summer snowfall are found to be primary controls on lake density at their respective timescales, the former being influenced by changes in the southern annular mode. Climatic controls on an intra-annual scale are complex, with melt, snowfall and temperature influencing lake density. Although lakes are widespread in several years, little evidence has been found of the unstable drainage which preceded neighbouring ice shelf collapse. This study demonstrates the value of frequent monitoring by current generations of optical satellites in lake analysis; and provides the first long-term catalogue of lakes on George VI. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Ice Shelf Ice Shelves Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Buttress ENVELOPE(-57.083,-57.083,-63.550,-63.550) High Lake ENVELOPE(142.675,142.675,-66.995,-66.995)
institution Open Polar
collection Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints
op_collection_id ftulancaster
language English
description Floating ice shelves cover ~1.5million km2 of Antarctica’s area, and are important as they buttress land ice, which limits sea level rise. In recent years, several such Antarctic ice shelves have collapsed or retreated. Supraglacial lakes are linked to warm periods and influence the stability of ice shelves through hydrofracture. Climate change induced temperature increases may increase lake presence, thus decreasing stability. Monitoring ‘at risk’ ice shelves is therefore important to understand their likelihood of fracture. George VI is located on the western Antarctic Peninsula, covering ~23200 km2, and has had high lake densities in its northern sector. This study analyses 31 years of imagery to understand the long-term and seasonal dynamics of lake evolution. This is the first study to characterise supraglacial lake variability in the long- and short-term on George VI, thus producing a comprehensive picture of lake evolution. Here I use a semi-automated technique to map lakes in >160 satellite images from Sentinel 2 and Landsat 4-8. Additional influences on stability and lake presence are gauged using climatic and glaciological data. Analysis of recent imagery shows that the apparent high lake density in summer 2020 is not unique on George VI, with 1989-90 having similar densities persisting over ≥3 years. Decadal average temperature and annual summer snowfall are found to be primary controls on lake density at their respective timescales, the former being influenced by changes in the southern annular mode. Climatic controls on an intra-annual scale are complex, with melt, snowfall and temperature influencing lake density. Although lakes are widespread in several years, little evidence has been found of the unstable drainage which preceded neighbouring ice shelf collapse. This study demonstrates the value of frequent monitoring by current generations of optical satellites in lake analysis; and provides the first long-term catalogue of lakes on George VI.
format Thesis
author Barnes, Thomas
spellingShingle Barnes, Thomas
Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI
author_facet Barnes, Thomas
author_sort Barnes, Thomas
title Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI
title_short Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI
title_full Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI
title_fullStr Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI
title_full_unstemmed Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI
title_sort understanding spatial and temporal variability in supraglacial lakes on an antarctic ice shelf:a 31-year study of george vi
publisher Lancaster University
publishDate 2020
url https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/147999/
https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/147999/1/2020barnesMRes.pdf
https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1111
long_lat ENVELOPE(-57.083,-57.083,-63.550,-63.550)
ENVELOPE(142.675,142.675,-66.995,-66.995)
geographic Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Buttress
High Lake
geographic_facet Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Buttress
High Lake
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
op_relation https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/147999/1/2020barnesMRes.pdf
Barnes, Thomas (2020) Understanding spatial and temporal variability in Supraglacial Lakes on an Antarctic Ice Shelf:A 31-year study of George VI. Masters thesis, UNSPECIFIED.
op_rights creative_commons_attribution_4_0_international_license
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1111
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