Open Access
Open access
Annals of Glaciology, volume 65, pages 1-7

Deriving iceberg ablation rates using an on-iceberg autonomous phase-sensitive radar (ApRES)

Kristin M. Schild 1, 2
Irena Vaňková 3
David A Sutherland 4
K. W. Nicholls 5
1
 
School of Earth and Climate Sciences, University of Maine, Orono, ME, USA
2
 
Climate Change Institute, University of Maine, Orono, ME, USA
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-10-21
scimago Q1
SJR0.967
CiteScore8.2
Impact factor2.5
ISSN02603055, 17275644
Abstract

The increase in iceberg discharge into the polar oceans highlights the importance of understanding how quickly icebergs are deteriorating and where the resulting freshwater injection is occurring. Recent advances in quantifying iceberg deterioration through combinations of modeling, remote sensing and direct in situ measurements have successfully calculated overall ablation rates, and surface and sidewall ablation; however, in situ measurements of basal melt rates have been difficult to obtain. Radar has successfully measured iceberg thickness, but repeat measurements, which would capture a change in iceberg thickness with time, have not yet been collected. Here we test the applicability of using an on-iceberg autonomous phase-sensitive radar (ApRES) to quantify basal ablation rates of a large (~800 m long) non-tabular Arctic iceberg during an intensive 2019 summer field campaign in Sermilik Fjord, southeast Greenland. We find that ApRES can be used to measure basal ablation even over a short deployment period (10 d), and also provide a lower bound on sidewall melt. This study fills a critical gap in iceberg research and pushes the limits of field instrumentation.

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