Basal glacier ice and massive ground ice: Different scientists, same science?

Whilst glaciologists and permafrost researchers investigate ice bodies using similar techniques, there has been surprisingly little collaboration between the two communities. This paper examines the potential benefits of interdisciplinary research into the formation of basal ice beneath glaciers and...

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Main Authors: Richard I Waller, Julian Murton, Peter G Knight
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Ice
Online Access:https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Basal_glacier_ice_and_massive_ground_ice_Different_scientists_same_science_/23319326
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spelling ftunivsussexfig:oai:figshare.com:article/23319326 2023-06-18T03:41:04+02:00 Basal glacier ice and massive ground ice: Different scientists, same science? Richard I Waller Julian Murton Peter G Knight 2009-01-01T00:00:00Z https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Basal_glacier_ice_and_massive_ground_ice_Different_scientists_same_science_/23319326 unknown 10779/uos.23319326.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Basal_glacier_ice_and_massive_ground_ice_Different_scientists_same_science_/23319326 Copyright not evaluated Uncategorised value Text Journal contribution 2009 ftunivsussexfig 2023-06-07T23:32:03Z Whilst glaciologists and permafrost researchers investigate ice bodies using similar techniques, there has been surprisingly little collaboration between the two communities. This paper examines the potential benefits of interdisciplinary research into the formation of basal ice beneath glaciers and the origin of massive ice in glaciated permafrost regions. Active collaboration in these areas has already improved our understanding of the formation of basal ice beneath cold-based glaciers, the critical role played by basal freezing in controlling the dynamic behaviour of stagnating ice streams and the significance of glacier-permafrost interactions at the margins of Pleistocene ice sheets. However, in order to promote future collaboration certain obstacles need to be overcome. The contrasting ice-classification schemes employed by glaciologists and permafrost scientists, for example, need to be unified in order to allow detailed comparisons of ice-rich sequences in both environments. This could, in turn, enable exciting research advances, most notably by facilitating the identification of preserved remnants of Pleistocene ice sheets within permafrost regions that provide a potentially invaluable and currently largely untapped source of palaeoglaciological information. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ice permafrost University of Sussex: Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection University of Sussex: Figshare
op_collection_id ftunivsussexfig
language unknown
topic Uncategorised value
spellingShingle Uncategorised value
Richard I Waller
Julian Murton
Peter G Knight
Basal glacier ice and massive ground ice: Different scientists, same science?
topic_facet Uncategorised value
description Whilst glaciologists and permafrost researchers investigate ice bodies using similar techniques, there has been surprisingly little collaboration between the two communities. This paper examines the potential benefits of interdisciplinary research into the formation of basal ice beneath glaciers and the origin of massive ice in glaciated permafrost regions. Active collaboration in these areas has already improved our understanding of the formation of basal ice beneath cold-based glaciers, the critical role played by basal freezing in controlling the dynamic behaviour of stagnating ice streams and the significance of glacier-permafrost interactions at the margins of Pleistocene ice sheets. However, in order to promote future collaboration certain obstacles need to be overcome. The contrasting ice-classification schemes employed by glaciologists and permafrost scientists, for example, need to be unified in order to allow detailed comparisons of ice-rich sequences in both environments. This could, in turn, enable exciting research advances, most notably by facilitating the identification of preserved remnants of Pleistocene ice sheets within permafrost regions that provide a potentially invaluable and currently largely untapped source of palaeoglaciological information.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Richard I Waller
Julian Murton
Peter G Knight
author_facet Richard I Waller
Julian Murton
Peter G Knight
author_sort Richard I Waller
title Basal glacier ice and massive ground ice: Different scientists, same science?
title_short Basal glacier ice and massive ground ice: Different scientists, same science?
title_full Basal glacier ice and massive ground ice: Different scientists, same science?
title_fullStr Basal glacier ice and massive ground ice: Different scientists, same science?
title_full_unstemmed Basal glacier ice and massive ground ice: Different scientists, same science?
title_sort basal glacier ice and massive ground ice: different scientists, same science?
publishDate 2009
url https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Basal_glacier_ice_and_massive_ground_ice_Different_scientists_same_science_/23319326
genre Ice
permafrost
genre_facet Ice
permafrost
op_relation 10779/uos.23319326.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Basal_glacier_ice_and_massive_ground_ice_Different_scientists_same_science_/23319326
op_rights Copyright not evaluated
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