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The glacial geomorphology of western Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-08-24, 11:02 authored by J. C. H. Newall, T. Dymova, E. Serra, R. Blomdin, O. Fredin, N. F. Glasser, Y. Suganuma, J. M. Harbor, A. P. Stroeven

Reconstructing the response of present-day ice sheets to past global climate change is important for constraining and refining the numerical models which forecast future contributions of these ice sheets to sea-level change. Mapping landforms is an essential step in reconstructing glacial histories. Here we present a new map of glacial landforms and deposits on nunataks in western Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica. Nunataks are mountains or ridges that currently protrude through the ice sheet and may provide evidence that they have been wholly or partly covered by ice, thus indicating a formerly more extensive (thicker) ice sheet. The map was produced through a combination of mapping from Worldview satellite imagery and ground validation. The sub-metre spatial resolution of the satellite imagery enabled mapping with unprecedented detail. Ten landform categories have been mapped, and the landform distributions provide evidence constraining spatial patterns of a previously thicker ice sheet.

Funding

This work has been funded through the MAGIC-DML consortium which is supported by Stockholm University (Stroeven), Norwegian Polar Institute/NARE under Grant ‘MAGIC-DML’ (Fredin), the US National Science Foundation under grant number PLR-1542930 (Harbor & Lifton), Swedish Research Council under grant number 2016-04422 (Harbor & Stroeven), and the German Research Foundation (DFG), Priority Programme 1158 ‘Antarctic Research’ under grant number 365737614 (Rogozhina & Prange).

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