Tectonic signature on the ice cap surface pattern in Dome C area, East Antarctica

The bedrock morphology in Dome C area in East Antarctica is characterised by the presence of a series of elongated depressions separating ridges, with the Aurora and Concordia trenches representing the major depressions with a length of over 100km. In this area the ice cap reaches a thickness of up...

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Main Authors: CIANFARRA, Paola, SALVINI, Francesco
Other Authors: Cianfarra, Paola, Salvini, Francesco
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:Italian
English
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11590/273249
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spelling ftunivroma3iris:oai:iris.uniroma3.it:11590/273249 2024-01-14T10:01:47+01:00 Tectonic signature on the ice cap surface pattern in Dome C area, East Antarctica CIANFARRA, Paola SALVINI, Francesco Cianfarra, Paola Salvini, Francesco 2004 ELETTRONICO http://hdl.handle.net/11590/273249 ita eng ita eng http://hdl.handle.net/11590/273249 info:eu-repo/semantics/other 2004 ftunivroma3iris 2023-12-20T17:41:17Z The bedrock morphology in Dome C area in East Antarctica is characterised by the presence of a series of elongated depressions separating ridges, with the Aurora and Concordia trenches representing the major depressions with a length of over 100km. In this area the ice cap reaches a thickness of up to 4000 m, leaving the possibility to have water formation and accumulation at its bottom. Vostok Lake is the largest, most famous among these subglacial depression. The geodynamic scenario responsible for the tectonic origin of these structural depression is not still clear: some Authors hypothesise the existence of an Early Paleozoic regional rifting, others propose a Paleozoic compressional tectonic setting. TheAurora and Concordia trenches can be associated to the Vostok Lake to the West, and together form a set of elongated, roughly N-S to NNW-SSE structural depressions, not perfectly parallel. Therefore, it is reasonable to frame their evolution within a NE-SW trending trans-extensional corridor characterised by left lateral, strike-slip shear, with the depressions associated to faults in horse tail geometry (Cianfarra et al., 2003). The relative young age of the Antarctic Ice Cap, about 38 Ma, compared with the old, Mesozoic age of the former, peneplanised landscape constrains the age of these sharp and fresh structures in Late Cenozoic time. The majority of the observed lakes and depressions are situated in relatively close proximity to ice divides where both the surface slope and ice velocity is small. The presence of this morphology induces variations in the surface texture of the ice cap either due to the movements of the ice sheet on the roughness of the bedrock morphology, and/or to the interaction with active tectonic processes. A series of preferential orientations may relate also to exogenous processes as regional winds. The resulting textural anisotropy of the ice surface can be easily detected from regional scale remotely sensed images. Radarsat mosaic of Antarctica proved a useful tool to ... Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica East Antarctica Ice cap Ice Sheet Anagrafe della Ricerca d'Ateneo (Universitá degli studi Roma Tre) Antarctic East Antarctica The Antarctic Vostok Lake ENVELOPE(104.750,104.750,-77.392,-77.392)
institution Open Polar
collection Anagrafe della Ricerca d'Ateneo (Universitá degli studi Roma Tre)
op_collection_id ftunivroma3iris
language Italian
English
description The bedrock morphology in Dome C area in East Antarctica is characterised by the presence of a series of elongated depressions separating ridges, with the Aurora and Concordia trenches representing the major depressions with a length of over 100km. In this area the ice cap reaches a thickness of up to 4000 m, leaving the possibility to have water formation and accumulation at its bottom. Vostok Lake is the largest, most famous among these subglacial depression. The geodynamic scenario responsible for the tectonic origin of these structural depression is not still clear: some Authors hypothesise the existence of an Early Paleozoic regional rifting, others propose a Paleozoic compressional tectonic setting. TheAurora and Concordia trenches can be associated to the Vostok Lake to the West, and together form a set of elongated, roughly N-S to NNW-SSE structural depressions, not perfectly parallel. Therefore, it is reasonable to frame their evolution within a NE-SW trending trans-extensional corridor characterised by left lateral, strike-slip shear, with the depressions associated to faults in horse tail geometry (Cianfarra et al., 2003). The relative young age of the Antarctic Ice Cap, about 38 Ma, compared with the old, Mesozoic age of the former, peneplanised landscape constrains the age of these sharp and fresh structures in Late Cenozoic time. The majority of the observed lakes and depressions are situated in relatively close proximity to ice divides where both the surface slope and ice velocity is small. The presence of this morphology induces variations in the surface texture of the ice cap either due to the movements of the ice sheet on the roughness of the bedrock morphology, and/or to the interaction with active tectonic processes. A series of preferential orientations may relate also to exogenous processes as regional winds. The resulting textural anisotropy of the ice surface can be easily detected from regional scale remotely sensed images. Radarsat mosaic of Antarctica proved a useful tool to ...
author2 Cianfarra, Paola
Salvini, Francesco
format Other/Unknown Material
author CIANFARRA, Paola
SALVINI, Francesco
spellingShingle CIANFARRA, Paola
SALVINI, Francesco
Tectonic signature on the ice cap surface pattern in Dome C area, East Antarctica
author_facet CIANFARRA, Paola
SALVINI, Francesco
author_sort CIANFARRA, Paola
title Tectonic signature on the ice cap surface pattern in Dome C area, East Antarctica
title_short Tectonic signature on the ice cap surface pattern in Dome C area, East Antarctica
title_full Tectonic signature on the ice cap surface pattern in Dome C area, East Antarctica
title_fullStr Tectonic signature on the ice cap surface pattern in Dome C area, East Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed Tectonic signature on the ice cap surface pattern in Dome C area, East Antarctica
title_sort tectonic signature on the ice cap surface pattern in dome c area, east antarctica
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/11590/273249
long_lat ENVELOPE(104.750,104.750,-77.392,-77.392)
geographic Antarctic
East Antarctica
The Antarctic
Vostok Lake
geographic_facet Antarctic
East Antarctica
The Antarctic
Vostok Lake
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Ice cap
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Ice cap
Ice Sheet
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11590/273249
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