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Geophysical survey at Talos Dome, East Antarctica: The search for a new deep-drilling site

TitoloGeophysical survey at Talos Dome, East Antarctica: The search for a new deep-drilling site
Tipo di pubblicazioneArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Anno di Pubblicazione2004
AutoriFrezzotti, M, Bitelli G., De Michelis P., Deponti A., Forieri A., Gandolfi S., Maggi V., Mancini F., Rémy F., Tabacco I.E., Urbini S., Vittuari L., and Zirizzottl A.
RivistaAnnals of Glaciology
Volume39
Paginazione423-432
ISSN02603055
Parole chiaveantarctica, Arctic and Antarctic, East Antarctica, geophysical survey, glaciology, snow accumulation, World
Abstract

Talos Dome is an ice dome on the edge of the East Antarctic plateau; because accumulation is higher here than in other domes of East Antarctica, the ice preserves a good geochemical and palaeoclimatic record. A new map of the Talos Dome area locates the dome summit using the global positioning system (GPS) (72°47′14″S, 159°04′2″E; 2318.5 m elevation (WGS84)). A surface strain network of nine stakes was measured using GPS. Data indicate that the stake closest to the summit moves south-southeast at a few cm a -1. The other stakes, located 8 km away, move up to 0.33 m a -1. Airborne radar measurements indicate that the bedrock at the Talos Dome summit is about 400 m in elevation, and that it is covered by about 1900 m of ice. Snow radar and GPS surveys show that internal layering is continuous and horizontal in the summit area (15 km radius). The depth distribution analysis of snow radar layers reveals that accumulation decreases downwind of the dome (north-northeast) and increases upwind (south-southwest). The palaeomorphology of the dome has changed during the past 500 years, probably due to variation in spatial distribution of snow accumulation, driven by wind sublimation. In order to calculate a preliminary age vs depth profile for Talos Dome, a simple one-dimensional steady-state model was formulated. This model predicts that the ice 100 m above the bedrock may cover one glacial-interglacial period.

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-23844462467&partnerID=40&md5=85568eaf7293c35f59c0a57287d4cb9e
Citation KeyFrezzotti2004423