TY - JOUR
T1 - Short-term variations of Icelandic ice cap mass inferred from cGPS coordinate time series
AU - Compton, Kathleen
AU - Bennett, Richard A.
AU - Hreinsdóttir, Sigrún
AU - van Dam, Tonie
AU - Bordoni, Andrea
AU - Barletta, Valentina
AU - Spada, Giorgio
N1 - Funding Information:
cGPS data used in this study are archived at UNAVCO and the Iceland Meteorological Office. K.C. was funded in part by the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship award DGE-1143953, the P.E.O. Scholar Award, and the Arizona Geological Society Geoscience Scholarship. The Central Highlands Iceland (CHIL) GPS network was funded by the University of Arizona and grants from NSF (EAR-0711446 to the University of Arizona) and the Icelandic Center for Research RANNIS (60243011 to the Nordic Volcanological Center, University of Iceland). Special thanks to Sylvain Barbot for assistance implementing RELAX. The authors are grateful to Adrian Borsa and one anonymous reviewer for their constructive comments.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2017/6/1
Y1 - 2017/6/1
N2 - As the global climate changes, understanding short-term variations in water storage is increasingly important. Continuously operating Global Positioning System (cGPS) stations in Iceland record annual periodic motion—the elastic response to winter accumulation and spring melt seasons—with peak-to-peak vertical amplitudes over 20 mm for those sites in the Central Highlands. Here for the first time for Iceland, we demonstrate the utility of these cGPS-measured displacements for estimating seasonal and shorter-term ice cap mass changes. We calculate unit responses to each of the five largest ice caps in central Iceland at each of the 62 cGPS locations using an elastic half-space model and estimate ice mass variations from the cGPS time series using a simple least squares inversion scheme. We utilize all three components of motion, taking advantage of the seasonal motion recorded in the horizontal. We remove secular velocities and accelerations and explore the impact that seasonal motions due to atmospheric, hydrologic, and nontidal ocean loading have on our inversion results. Our results match available summer and winter mass balance measurements well, and we reproduce the seasonal stake-based observations of loading and melting within the 1б confidence bounds of the inversion. We identify nonperiodic ice mass changes associated with interannual variability in precipitation and other processes such as increased melting due to reduced ice surface albedo or decreased melting due to ice cap insulation in response to tephra deposition following volcanic eruptions, processes that are not resolved with once or twice-yearly stake measurements.
AB - As the global climate changes, understanding short-term variations in water storage is increasingly important. Continuously operating Global Positioning System (cGPS) stations in Iceland record annual periodic motion—the elastic response to winter accumulation and spring melt seasons—with peak-to-peak vertical amplitudes over 20 mm for those sites in the Central Highlands. Here for the first time for Iceland, we demonstrate the utility of these cGPS-measured displacements for estimating seasonal and shorter-term ice cap mass changes. We calculate unit responses to each of the five largest ice caps in central Iceland at each of the 62 cGPS locations using an elastic half-space model and estimate ice mass variations from the cGPS time series using a simple least squares inversion scheme. We utilize all three components of motion, taking advantage of the seasonal motion recorded in the horizontal. We remove secular velocities and accelerations and explore the impact that seasonal motions due to atmospheric, hydrologic, and nontidal ocean loading have on our inversion results. Our results match available summer and winter mass balance measurements well, and we reproduce the seasonal stake-based observations of loading and melting within the 1б confidence bounds of the inversion. We identify nonperiodic ice mass changes associated with interannual variability in precipitation and other processes such as increased melting due to reduced ice surface albedo or decreased melting due to ice cap insulation in response to tephra deposition following volcanic eruptions, processes that are not resolved with once or twice-yearly stake measurements.
KW - GPS geodesy
KW - Iceland
KW - ice mass variation
KW - ice/volcano interactions
KW - seasonal ground motion
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U2 - 10.1002/2017GC006831
DO - 10.1002/2017GC006831
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85020685238
SN - 1525-2027
VL - 18
SP - 2099
EP - 2119
JO - Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
JF - Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
IS - 6
ER -