The relationship between sticky spots and radar reflectivity beneath an active West Antarctic ice stream
Isolated areas of high basal drag, or ‘sticky spots’, are important and poorly understood
features in the force balance and dynamics of West Antarctic ice streams. Characterizing sticky spots
formed by thin or drying subglacial till using ice-penetrating radar is theoretically possible, as high radar
bed-returned power (BRP) is commonly related to an abundance of free water at the ice/bed interface,
provided losses from englacial attenuation can be estimated. In this study we use airborne radar data
collected over Evans Ice Stream to extract BRP profiles and test the sensitivity of BRP to the adopted
englacial attenuation correction. We analyse 11 �20km profiles in four fast-flow areas where sticky
spots have been inferred to exist on the basis of model and surface data inversions. In the majority of
profiles we note that the increase in basal drag is accompanied by a decrease in BRP and suggest that
this is evidence both for the presence of a sticky spot in those locations and that local variations in
subglacial hydrology are responsible for their existence. A comparison is made between empirical and
numerical modelling approaches for deriving englacial attenuation, and our findings generally support
previous studies that advocate a modelling approach.
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Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: Ashmore, David W., Bingham, Robert G., Hindmarsh, Richard C.A. ORCID record for Richard C.A. Hindmarsh, Corr, Hugh F.J., Joughin, Ian R.