Ice/bed interface and englacial properties of Svalbard ice masses deduced from airborne radio echo-sounding data

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Abstract

A substantial data set of digitially recorded radio echo-sounding data was collected over 44 ice masses in Spitsbergen and the ice caps on Nordaustlandet, Svalbard. These data have allowed quantitative analysis of bed and internal power-reflection coefficients. Substantial regional differences were observed and have been correlated with the presence of water and/or moraine at the bed and with the bulk thermal regime of the ice mass. Values of bed power-reflection coefficient varied between -40 and -8 dB. It is suggested that the ice caps in north-east Spitsbergen (possessing among the lowest reflection coefficients observed) are frozen to their beds as is much of Austfonna (in Nordaustlandet), and that such values imply the likelihood of a layer of debris-rich ice above the bedrock. -from Author

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Bamber, J. L. (1989). Ice/bed interface and englacial properties of Svalbard ice masses deduced from airborne radio echo-sounding data. Journal of Glaciology, 35(119), 30–37. https://doi.org/10.3189/002214389793701392

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