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Gravity-derived bathymetry for the Thwaites, Crosson and Dotson ice shelves (2009-2019)

***** A new version of the dataset is available *****



Jordan, T., Heywood, K., Wahlin, A., Hall, R., Muto, A., Dutrieux, P., Hogan, K., Girton, J., Alley, K., & Pettit, E. (2025). Updated gravity-derived bathymetry for the Thwaites, Crosson and Dotson ice shelves (2009-2022) (Version 1.0) [Data set]. NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre. https://doi.org/10.5285/baef2e88-300f-42bc-8ccb-bfdff147a492



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This dataset is an estimate of sub ice shelf bathymetry beneath the Thwaites, Crosson and Dotson ice shelves. The output bathymetry is derived from a new compilation of gravity data collected up to the end of the 2018/19 field season. The input gravity dataset includes airborne data from Operation Ice Bridge (OIB) and the NERC/NSF International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration (ITGC), and marine gravity from the R/V Nathaniel B. Palmer cruise NBP19-02. The recovered bathymetry was constrained by swath bathymetry and onshore airborne radio-echo depth sounding data in the surrounding area. Ice shelves mask the critical link between the ocean and cryosphere systems, and hence accurate sub ice shelf bathymetry is critical for generating reliable models of future ice sheet change. Included in the data release is the input free air gravity data, constraining bathymetry/sub-ice topography, and output gravity derived bathymetry.





This work was funded by the British Antarctic Survey core program (Geology and Geophysics team), in support of the joint Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)/ National Science Foundation (NSF) International Thwaites Glacier Collaboration (ITGC).



Additional specific support came from NERC Grants: NE/S006664/1 and NE/S006419/1, and NSF Grants: NSF1842064, NSFPLR-NERC-1738942, NSFPLR-NERC-1738992 and NSFPLR-NERC-1739003.

Simple

Date (Creation)
2020-05-21
Date (Revision)
2020-05-21
Date (Publication)
2020-05-21
Date (released)
2020-05-21
Edition

1.0

Unique resource identifier
https://doi.org/10.5285/7803de8b-8a74-466b-888e-e8c737bf21ce
Codespace

doi

Unique resource identifier
GB/NERC/BAS/PDC/01332
Codespace

https://data.bas.ac.uk/

Unique resource identifier
NE/S006664/1
Codespace

award

Unique resource identifier
NE/S006419/1
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Other citation details

Please cite this item as: Jordan, T., Porter, D., Tinto, K., Millan, R., Muto, A., Hogan, K., Larter, R., Graham, A., Paden, J., & Robinson, C. (2020). Gravity-derived bathymetry for the Thwaites, Crosson and Dotson ice shelves (2009-2019) (Version 1.0) [Data set]. UK Polar Data Centre, Natural Environment Research Council, UK Research & Innovation. https://doi.org/10.5285/7803de8b-8a74-466b-888e-e8c737bf21ce

Credit

No credit.

Status
Completed
Point of contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role
British Antarctic Survey Jordan, Tom Author

Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory

Porter, David Author

Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory

Tinto, Kirsty Author

Universite Grenoble Alpes, CNRS

Millan, Romain Author

Dept. of Earth and Environmental Science, Temple University

Muto, Atsuhiro Author
British Antarctic Survey Hogan, Kelly Author
British Antarctic Survey Larter, Robert Author

College of Marine Science, University of South Florida

Graham, Alastair Author

Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS), The University of Kansas

Paden, John Author
British Antarctic Survey

Robinson, Carl

Author
NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre

PDCServiceDesk@bas.ac.uk

Point of contact
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed
Maintenance note
Completed
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Cryosphere > Glaciers/Ice Sheets
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Bathymetry/Seafloor Topography
  • EARTH SCIENCE > Solid Earth > Geodetics/Gravity
Theme
  • Bathymetry

  • Gravity

  • ITGC

  • Ice shelf

  • Thwaites Glacier

  • West Antarctica

Place
  • Thwaites Glacier Antarctica

  • Amundsen Sea Antarctica

  • Crosson Ice Shelf Antarctica

  • Dotson Ice Shelf Antarctica

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

  • Elevation
  • Oceanographic geographical features
  • Geology
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no limitations to public access
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no limitations
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Open Government Licence v3.0
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This data is governed by the NERC Data Policy: https://www.ukri.org/who-we-are/nerc/our-policies-and-standards/nerc-data-policy/

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Further by downloading this data the user acknowledges that they agree with the NERC data policy (), and the following conditions:





1. To cite the data in any publication as follows:



Jordan, T., Porter, D., Tinto, K., Millan, R., Muto, A., Hogan, K., Larter, R., Graham, A., Paden, J., & Robinson, C. (2020). Gravity-derived bathymetry for the Thwaites, Crosson and Dotson ice shelves (2009-2019) (Version 1.0) [Data set]. UK Polar Data Centre, Natural Environment Research Council, UK Research & Innovation. https://doi.org/10.5285/7803DE8B-8A74-466B-888E-E8C737BF21CE







2. The user recognizes the limitations of data. Use of the data is at the users' own risk, and there is no warranty as to the quality or accuracy of any data, or the fitness of the data for your intended use. The data are not necessarily fully quality assured and cannot be expected to be free from measurement uncertainty, systematic biases, or errors of interpretation or analysis, and may include inaccuracies in error margins quoted with the data.

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url

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Cross reference
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doi
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doi

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doi
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doi

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Cross reference
Unique resource identifier
doi
Codespace

doi

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Language
English
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Topic category
  • Elevation
  • Geoscientific information
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Begin date
2009-01-01
End date
2019-12-31
Supplemental Information

It is recommended that careful attention be paid to the contents of any data, and that the author be contacted with any questions regarding appropriate use. If you find any errors or omissions, please report them to polardatacentre@bas.ac.uk.

Title

European Petroleum Survey Group (EPSG) Geodetic Parameter Registry

Date (Publication)
2008-11-12
Cited responsible party
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

European Petroleum Survey Group

EPSGadministrator@iogp.org

Publisher
Unique resource identifier
urn:ogc:def:crs:EPSG::3031
Version

6.18.3

Distributor

Distributor contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role
NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre

PDCServiceDesk@bas.ac.uk

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1887437
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https://ramadda.data.bas.ac.uk/repository/entry/show?entryid=7803de8b-8a74-466b-888e-e8c737bf21ce

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Methodology:

Input gravity data is from Operation Ice Bridge (OIB) and the ITGC 2018/19 airborne campaign, together with marine gravity data from cruise NBP19-02. The OIB free-air gravity data has an error of ~1.67 mGal in this region and resolves anomalies with a ~10 km full wavelength (Cochran and Bell, 2010, updated 2018; Tinto and Bell, 2011). The ITGC campaign data (Jordan et al., 2020c) utilised a 'strapdown' gravity approach based around an iMar Inertial Navigation System (INS) (Becker et al., 2015; Wei and Schwarz, 1998), resulting in data with an internal error from crossover analysis of 1.56 mGal and resolving wavelengths down to ~5 km. Airborne data were restricted to lines flown at <1500 m above the surface with over 95% of the data collected at 450 m +/-200 m above the surface. Upward and downward continuation of the gravity data to a common altitude was therefore neglected as continuation by ~200 m will have little impact on the amplitude of the gravity anomalies (~1 mGal) given the ~1000 m range to the key bathymetric sources. Marine gravity data from cruise NBP19-02 matched the pattern of the airborne anomalies, but was offset by 7.14 mGal above the airborne data. This shift of 7.14 mGal was removed from the marine line data as a single uniform (DC) value. All line data were then merged into a single database, interpolated onto a 1 km mesh raster and filtered with a 5 km low pass filter removing residual line to line noise.



The constraining topographic observations onshore were taken from OIB line radar data (Paden et al., 2010, updated 2018), augmented with new depth sounding radar collected along with the gravity data during the ITGC campaign. This new bed elevation data was collected using a 600-900 MHz accumulation radar provided by the Center for Remote Sensing of Ice Sheets (CReSIS). Bed elevations were picked from SAR processed radargrams in a semi-automated fashion. Visual inspection revealed a few incorrect onshore bed picks in the OIB dataset on Bear Island, which gave bed elevations above the highly accurate REMA surface digital elevation model (DEM) (Howat et al., 2019). These points were deleted from the integrated line bed elevation dataset. The line bed elevation data were corrected to the GL04c Geoid (Forste et al., 2008), and the data interpolated onto a 1 km mesh raster. This gridded dataset was carefully masked to remove regions which are now covered by the floating ice shelf based on the most up to date grounding lines (Milillo et al., 2019; Rignot et al., 2014). Bed elevation values over local sub-shelf pinning points were also excluded. Beyond the ice shelves we took the values constrained by a new compilation of shipborne multibeam swath bathymetric data (Hogan et al., 2020), which was down sampled to 1 km mesh raster for this study.





To calculate the sub-ice-shelf bathymetry we applied an updated version of the two-step topographic shift method (Hodgson et al., 2019).



In the first step the "initial bathymetric estimate" is calculated by converting the free-air gravity anomalies to equivalent variation in topography using an iterative forward modelling approach based on a Gauss-Legendre Quadrature gravity model of the theoretical bathymetric surface. An observation altitude of 500 m was assumed, and a density contrast of -1642 kgm-3 was imposed, equivalent to the contrast between water (1028 kgm-3) and rock (2670 kgm-3). To initiate the gravity inversion, we converted the free-air anomaly to equivalent topography using the Bouguer slab formula. The bathymetric surface was then iteratively adjusted to reduce the model/observed residual. After two stages of iteration the modelled and observed gravity field had converged to better than +/- 1 mGal across most of the survey area. Topography predicted to be above the observation surface was truncated, and the model did not converge in these regions.





In th...(14)

Data collection:

Input data compilations were generated and quality checked in Geosoft Oasis Montage software package. Subsequent data processing and recovery of bathymetry used a Gauss-Legendre Quadrature gravity modelling programme (von Frese et al., 1981) coupled with basic Generic Mapping Tools (GMT V5) scripts implemented in a Linux environment.

Data quality:

Comparison with an independent swath bathymetric dataset indicates errors in the gravity derived bathymetry have a standard deviation of ~100 m, which we take to be representative of the error for this dataset. However, two important notes are: Firstly, away from constraining swath or radar data un-resolved geological features could lead to larger errors. Secondly, the gravity data only resolves features with a wavelength of 5 km or more. Smaller features may be present, but will not be reliably imaged.

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File identifier
7803de8b-8a74-466b-888e-e8c737bf21ce XML
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English
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Dataset
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dataset

Date stamp
2020-05-21
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ISO 19115 Geographic Information - Metadata

Metadata standard version

ISO 19115:2003(E)

Metadata author
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role
NERC EDS UK Polar Data Centre

polardatacentre@bas.ac.uk

Point of contact
 
 

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Keywords

Bathymetry Gravity ITGC Ice shelf Thwaites Glacier West Antarctica
GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

Elevation Geology Oceanographic geographical features
Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords

EARTH SCIENCE > Cryosphere > Glaciers/Ice Sheets EARTH SCIENCE > Oceans > Bathymetry/Seafloor Topography EARTH SCIENCE > Solid Earth > Geodetics/Gravity


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