Abstract
On an 11 m firn/ice core from Kongsvegen, Svalbard, we have used dielectric profiling (DEP) to measure electrical properties, and digital photography to measure a core optical stratigraphy (COS) profile. We also used a neutron-scattering probe (NP) to measure a density profile in the borehole from which the core was extracted. The NP- and DEP-derived density profiles were similar, showing large-scale (>30 cm) variation in the gravimetric densities of each core section. Fine-scale features (<10 cm) are well characterized by the COS record and are seen at a slightly lower resolution in both the DEP and NP records, which show increasing smoothing. A combination of the density accuracy of NP and the spatial resolution of COS provides a useful method of evaluating the shallow-density profile of a glacier, improving paleoclimate interpretation, mass-balance measurement and interpretation of radar returns.
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CITATION STYLE
Hawley, R. L., Brandt, O., Morris, E. M., Kohler, J., Shepherd, A. P., & Wingham, D. J. (2008). Techniques for measuring high-resolution firn density profiles: Case study from Kongsvegen, Svalbard. Journal of Glaciology, 54(186), 463–468. https://doi.org/10.3189/002214308785837020
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