Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: strategies and limitations

Subglacial tills play an important role in glacier dynamics but are difficult to characterize in situ. Amplitude Variation with Angle (AVA) analysis of seismic reflection data can distinguish between stiff tills and deformable tills. Subglacial tills play an important role in glacier dynamics but ar...

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Main Authors: Zechmann, Jenna M., Booth, Adam D., Truffer, Martin, Gusmeroli, Alessio, Amundson, Jason M., Larsen, Christopher S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: International Glaciological Society 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11198
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/11198 2023-05-15T16:20:29+02:00 Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: strategies and limitations Zechmann, Jenna M. Booth, Adam D. Truffer, Martin Gusmeroli, Alessio Amundson, Jason M. Larsen, Christopher S. 2018-09-20 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11198 en_US eng International Glaciological Society Zechmann, J. M., Booth, A. D., Truffer, M., Gusmeroli, A., Amundson, J. M., & Larsen, C. F. (2018). Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: Strategies and limitations. Journal of Glaciology, 64(247), 796–810. https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2018.69 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11198 Journal of Glaciology glacier geophysics glacial tills glaciological instruments and methods seismics subglacial Article 2018 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:37:39Z Subglacial tills play an important role in glacier dynamics but are difficult to characterize in situ. Amplitude Variation with Angle (AVA) analysis of seismic reflection data can distinguish between stiff tills and deformable tills. Subglacial tills play an important role in glacier dynamics but are difficult to characterize in situ. Amplitude Variation with Angle (AVA) analysis of seismic reflection data can distinguish between stiff tills and deformable tills. However, AVA analysis in mountain glacier environments can be problem- atic: reflections can be obscured by Rayleigh wave energy scattered from crevasses, and complex basal topography can impede the location of reflection points in 2-D acquisitions. We use a forward model to produce challenging synthetic seismic records in order to test the efficacy of AVA in crevassed and geo- metrically complex environments. We find that we can distinguish subglacial till types in moderately cre- vassed environments, where ‘moderate’ depends on crevasse spacing and orientation. The forward model serves as a planning tool, as it can predict AVA success or failure based on characteristics of the study glacier. Applying lessons from the forward model, we perform AVA on a seismic dataset col- lected from Taku Glacier in Southeast Alaska in March 2016. Taku Glacier is a valley glacier thought to overlay thick sediment deposits. A near-offset polarity reversal confirms that the tills are deformable. The Taku 2016 survey was made possible by input and assist- ance from Thomas Hart (blaster), Aurora Roth, and Andy Aschwanden. IRIS PASSCAL provided seismic recording equipment for the Taku 2016 seismic survey. Thanks to Peter Burkett, Sridhar Anandakrishnan and Kiya Riverman for instrument support, and to Bernard Coakley, Bernard Hallet, Esther Babcock and some anonymous reviewers for their input and advice. Also thanks to the Consortium for Research in Elastic Wave Exploration Seismology (CREWES) for providing Matlab scripts that facilitated the seismic forward modeling. ... Article in Journal/Newspaper glacier Journal of Glaciology Alaska University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Esther ENVELOPE(-57.700,-57.700,-61.917,-61.917) Hallet ENVELOPE(6.662,6.662,63.003,63.003) Kiya ENVELOPE(44.095,44.095,67.659,67.659) Taku ENVELOPE(-133.854,-133.854,59.633,59.633)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language English
topic glacier geophysics
glacial tills
glaciological instruments and methods
seismics
subglacial
spellingShingle glacier geophysics
glacial tills
glaciological instruments and methods
seismics
subglacial
Zechmann, Jenna M.
Booth, Adam D.
Truffer, Martin
Gusmeroli, Alessio
Amundson, Jason M.
Larsen, Christopher S.
Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: strategies and limitations
topic_facet glacier geophysics
glacial tills
glaciological instruments and methods
seismics
subglacial
description Subglacial tills play an important role in glacier dynamics but are difficult to characterize in situ. Amplitude Variation with Angle (AVA) analysis of seismic reflection data can distinguish between stiff tills and deformable tills. Subglacial tills play an important role in glacier dynamics but are difficult to characterize in situ. Amplitude Variation with Angle (AVA) analysis of seismic reflection data can distinguish between stiff tills and deformable tills. However, AVA analysis in mountain glacier environments can be problem- atic: reflections can be obscured by Rayleigh wave energy scattered from crevasses, and complex basal topography can impede the location of reflection points in 2-D acquisitions. We use a forward model to produce challenging synthetic seismic records in order to test the efficacy of AVA in crevassed and geo- metrically complex environments. We find that we can distinguish subglacial till types in moderately cre- vassed environments, where ‘moderate’ depends on crevasse spacing and orientation. The forward model serves as a planning tool, as it can predict AVA success or failure based on characteristics of the study glacier. Applying lessons from the forward model, we perform AVA on a seismic dataset col- lected from Taku Glacier in Southeast Alaska in March 2016. Taku Glacier is a valley glacier thought to overlay thick sediment deposits. A near-offset polarity reversal confirms that the tills are deformable. The Taku 2016 survey was made possible by input and assist- ance from Thomas Hart (blaster), Aurora Roth, and Andy Aschwanden. IRIS PASSCAL provided seismic recording equipment for the Taku 2016 seismic survey. Thanks to Peter Burkett, Sridhar Anandakrishnan and Kiya Riverman for instrument support, and to Bernard Coakley, Bernard Hallet, Esther Babcock and some anonymous reviewers for their input and advice. Also thanks to the Consortium for Research in Elastic Wave Exploration Seismology (CREWES) for providing Matlab scripts that facilitated the seismic forward modeling. ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Zechmann, Jenna M.
Booth, Adam D.
Truffer, Martin
Gusmeroli, Alessio
Amundson, Jason M.
Larsen, Christopher S.
author_facet Zechmann, Jenna M.
Booth, Adam D.
Truffer, Martin
Gusmeroli, Alessio
Amundson, Jason M.
Larsen, Christopher S.
author_sort Zechmann, Jenna M.
title Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: strategies and limitations
title_short Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: strategies and limitations
title_full Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: strategies and limitations
title_fullStr Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: strategies and limitations
title_full_unstemmed Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: strategies and limitations
title_sort active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: strategies and limitations
publisher International Glaciological Society
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11198
long_lat ENVELOPE(-57.700,-57.700,-61.917,-61.917)
ENVELOPE(6.662,6.662,63.003,63.003)
ENVELOPE(44.095,44.095,67.659,67.659)
ENVELOPE(-133.854,-133.854,59.633,59.633)
geographic Esther
Hallet
Kiya
Taku
geographic_facet Esther
Hallet
Kiya
Taku
genre glacier
Journal of Glaciology
Alaska
genre_facet glacier
Journal of Glaciology
Alaska
op_relation Zechmann, J. M., Booth, A. D., Truffer, M., Gusmeroli, A., Amundson, J. M., & Larsen, C. F. (2018). Active seismic studies in valley glacier settings: Strategies and limitations. Journal of Glaciology, 64(247), 796–810. https://doi.org/10.1017/jog.2018.69
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/11198
Journal of Glaciology
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