
Georadar‐derived estimates of firn density in the percolation zone, western Greenland ice sheet
Author(s) -
Brown Joel,
Bradford John,
Harper Joel,
Pfeffer W. Tad,
Humphrey Neil,
MosleyThompson Ellen
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: earth surface
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2011jf002089
Subject(s) - firn , geology , greenland ice sheet , meltwater , ice sheet , ice core , elevation (ballistics) , snow , geomorphology , transect , mineralogy , climatology , oceanography , geometry , mathematics
Greater understanding of variations in firn densification is needed to distinguish between dynamic and melt‐driven elevation changes on the Greenland ice sheet. This is especially true in Greenland's percolation zone, where firn density profiles are poorly documented because few ice cores are extracted in regions with surface melt. We used georadar to investigate firn density variations with depth along a ∼70 km transect through a portion of the accumulation area in western Greenland that partially melts. We estimated electromagnetic wave velocity by inverting reflection traveltimes picked from common midpoint gathers. We followed a procedure designed to find the simplest velocity versus depth model that describes the data within estimated uncertainty. On the basis of the velocities, we estimated 13 depth‐density profiles of the upper 80 m using a petrophysical model based on the complex refractive index method equation. At the highest elevation site, our density profile is consistent with nearby core data acquired in the same year. Our profiles at the six highest elevation sites match an empirically based densification model for dry firn, indicating relatively minor amounts of water infiltration and densification by melt and refreeze in this higher region of the percolation zone. At the four lowest elevation sites our profiles reach ice densities at substantially shallower depths, implying considerable meltwater infiltration and ice layer development in this lower region of the percolation zone. The separation between these two regions is 8 km and spans 60 m of elevation, which suggests that the balance between dry‐firn and melt‐induced densification processes is sensitive to minor changes in melt.