Introduction
The West Antarctic ice sheet is a marine ice sheet resting on rock that was below sea-level before isostatic depression. Reference WeertmanWeertman (1974) has shown that marine ice sheets are probably unstable, existing usually in a state of growth or retreat, and retreat may be very rapid. Reference MercerMercer (1968) suggested that complete collapse of the West Antarctic ice sheet could have been responsible for the well-documented higher sea-level during the Sangamon Interglacial, and Reference HughesHughes (1975) believes that the West Antarctic ice sheet may currently be collapsing.
Data from a network of stakes up-stream of "Byrd" station on the West Antarctic ice sheet were interpreted by Reference WhillansWhillans (1973) to indicate current thinning of the ice sheet, as was also suggested by work on oxygen isotope ratios and temperatures in the bore hole at "Byrd" station (Reference RobinRobin, 1970; Reference Johnsen, Johnsen, Dansgaard, Clausen and LangwayJohnsen and others, 1972). However, from a re-analysis of the "Byrd" strain-network data, Reference WhillansWhillans (1976) concluded that a large region near the ice crest of West Antarctica has been stable for about 30 000 years. This view is supported by Reference MayewskiMayewski's (1975) interpretation of glacial geology in the Transantarctic Mountains, indicating that the Antarctic ice sheet has remained almost unchanged for more than 10 000 years. However, other geological evidence suggests that the West Antarctic ice sheet has decreased in size significantly during the last 12 000 years, and it may have retreated across the entire area currently occupied by the Ross Ice Shelf since 6000 B.P. (Reference Denton and BornsDenton and Borns, 1974). Meanwhile, Reference Bentley, Bentley, Robertson and Greischer.Bentley and others (in press) have concluded that it would be difficult to reconcile isostatic gravity anomalies on the ice shelf with ice thicknesses substantially greater than at present less than about 5 000 years ago.
It may be possible to devise a scenario that reconciles these apparently conflicting opinions, but reconciliation is unlikely until there is more information on the past and present equilibrium state of the West Antarctic ice sheet/Ross Ice Shelf system. The acquisition of this information is one of the main aims of the Ross Ice Shelf Project (RISP). This project represents a first attempt to compile a systematic data base for a large and well-defined portion of the Antarctic ice sheet (Reference ZumbergeZumberge, 1971). The program involves geophysical and glaciological measurements at stations forming a 55 km grid over the entire surface of the Ross Ice Shelf, with related investigations within and beneath the ice shelf by way of a drill hole. The work on the surface of the ice shelf has been designated the "Ross Ice Shelf Geophysical and Glaciological Survey" (RIGGS), and it includes measurements of ice velocity and strain-rates, snow accumulation rates, surface-snow oxygen-isotope ratios, snow temperatures at 10 m depth, gravity values, ice thickness, sea-bed topography, and the seismic and electrical properties of the ice. The field work was started in 1973-74 and, by the end of the 1976-77 season almost all of the planned grid stations (Fig. 1) had been visited once for geophysical measurements and for the planting of stake patterns (strain rosettes) to measure ice-shelf strain-rates.
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Fig. 1. The Ross Ice Shelf, showing positions of RIGGS stations where measurements have been made of ice thickness, depth of sea bed, local gravity, snow-accumulation rates, ice velocity and strain-rates. Since the measurement of ice velocity and strain-rates requires two visits to a station, these data are available only for the stations where "rosettes" have been remeasured. The remaining stations will be reoccupied during 1977-78.
Stations in the eastern half of the ice shelf have been reoccupied for remeasurement of strain rosettes and for precise relocation of some of the stations by satellite tracking. Comparison with initial positions gives absolute velocities at these stations, and velocities at neighboring stations have been interpolated using the strain-rate data. Where interpolated ice velocities and measured values overlapped they generally showed agreement to within 25 m year-1 (Reference ThomasThomas, 1976[a]). At some of the stations firn cores down to 10 m depth were taken for surface-snow oxygen-isotope ratios and for identification of the maximum depth of snow containing fall-out from nuclear bombs. This latter measurement gives average snow-accumulation rates (Reference Clausen and DansgaardClausen and Dansgaard, 1977). Sea-bed topography and ice thickness were deduced from seismic measurements and from radio-echo sounding (Reference Clough and RobertsonClough and Robertson, 1975).
In this paper we shall use the RIGGS measurements to examine the present equilibrium state of the eastern half of the Ross Ice Shelf.
Ice-Shelf Equilibrium
The equilibrium state of an ice shelf can be assessed by considering volume-continuity requirements as the ice shelf passes through a stationary vertical column at a distance. x along a flow line (Reference ThomasThomas, 1977):
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where
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Velocity vectors that are calculated from RIGGS data give the routes of flow lines across the ice shelf, and Reference ThomasThomas (1976[b]) solved Equation(1) to give
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Fig. 2. The eastern side of the Ross Ice Shelf showing positions of RIGGS stations where ice thickness, snow-accumulation rate, ice velocity and strain-rates have been measured. Additional ice thickness data were obtained from several thousand km of aerial radio-echo sounding. The three bands of ice shelf ABCD, EFGH and MNOPQR ore bounded on each side by flow lines. AD and BC are the entry and exit gates for the band ABCD.
The volumes of ice entering
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For conservation of volume (Fig. 3) we have
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where
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Fig. 3. Volume continuity for a band of ice shelf that is bounded on each side by flow lines.
Values of ice velocity and ice thickness across each gate are shown in (Figure 4). They were interpolated from measured values at the grid stations and. for ice thickness, from airborne radio-echo-sounding data. Random errors are
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where n is the number of data points within the gate.
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Fig. 4. Ice velocity (solid line) and ice thickness (broken line) plotted against distance across the gates to the ice-shelf flow bands that are shown in (Figure 2). The error bars on the velocity data include random errors only. The velocity curves were drawn to conform to measurements of both velocity and velocity gradient across the direction of flow. The velocity minima in sections CB and RO represent the effects of local grounding by Crary Ice Rise and Roosevelt Island. A system of shear crevasses extends for about 20 km to the south-west of Crary Ice Rise and so we have assumed that shear predominates over this section of the velocity curve. On the other side of the ice rise the ice shelf suffers massive fracture along the north-east grounding line, and shear crevasses are restricted to a narrow zone on the ice-shelf side of this fracture zone.
In addition to these random errors we have assumed that the thickness and velocity measurements include systematic errors of
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where the bars imply averages taken across the appropriate gate. The error in
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Finally there is error in the divergence of the How lines that define the lateral margins of a band. The flow-line direction at any point is determined mainly by the ice-flow direction at the nearest grid point and this has an error of ±(1.5 to 2.5)°. Thus, a lateral flow line consists of a series of linked segments each of length Lj and with a random error of
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where j and j' refer to the "left" and "right" lateral margins, and m and k are the number of segments forming each of these margins.
The pronounced curvature of flow line AB (Fig. 2) and the lack of grid stations along the central part of its route introduce an additional uncertainty in the position of B. We have attempted to quantify this error by plotting the flow line first using lateral strain-rates to calculate divergence along the flow-line route and second by assuming that flow direction varies linearly between grid stations. Individual attempts by both authors gave a maximum difference of 8 km in the position of B along the gate BC. Here we adopt the central position of B and we assign an additional error to W 0 of
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For flow band MNOPQR in the north-east of the ice shelf, the margins P and Q lie at the grounding line between ice shelf and Roosevelt Island. Ice at Q, on the west side of the island, is assumed to have negligible seaward component of velocity, since there is no sign of fracture at the grounding line. On the east side of the island at P, however, the ice shelf is severely fractured and we have assigned to P an ice velocity of 100±70 m year-1. The position errors for P and Q are assumed to be
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The error to be applied to
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where subscripts 1 and r refer to the "left" and "right" sides of the exit gate, and
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For each flow band the values of
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TABLE I. VALUES OF PARAMETERS FOR EACH FLOW BAND
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For section ABCD in Figure 2 we then have
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for section EFGH
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and for section MNOPQR
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Thus, for negligible basal freezing or melting, the ice shelf appears to be thickening with time in the area up-stream of Crary Ice Rise, but is approximately in equilibrium near the RISP drill-hole site. Although no direct measurement of the basal freezing rate has yet been made at the RISP site, temperatures in the upper three-quarters of the ice shelf (personal communication from B. L. Hansen and J. M. Rand in 1976) are fully consistent with a model based on the analysis of Reference CraryCrary (1961) taking
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This value is larger than the regional snow-accumulation rate and if the ice shelf is thickening at this rate then ice that flows into the region from West Antarctic ice streams is being dammed, probably by Crary Ice Rise. Our result gives no indication of where the thickening rate reaches a maximum. Thickening may be concentrated over a fairly small zone immediately up-stream from Crary Ice Rise or, as concluded by Reference ThomasThomas (1976[b]), it may increase from about zero near the drill-hole site to reach a maximum at the grounding line in the south-east corner of the ice shelf. In either case, within the zone of maximum thickening, the sea bed is separated from the ice shelf by a very narrow wedge of sea-water so that even a small rate of thickening leads to grounding of large areas of ice shelf. If the angle between sea bed and ice-shelf base is φ and the local ice-shelf thickening rate is
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Further north, near Roosevelt Island, conditions may be favorable for bottom melting so that
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Summary
Balance calculations for the eastern half of the Ross Ice Shelf indicate that the south-east corner of the ice shelf may be growing thicker by more than 30 cm year-1. If this is so then it is probably due to the damming effects of Crary Ice Rise which may have formed comparatively recently at a point where the ice shelf ran aground on an isostatically-rising sea-bed ridge. Our results do not indicate where thickening is greatest. It may be immediately up-stream of the ice rise in which case the ice-rise grounding line is advancing about 300 m year-1 into the ice shelf in a south-easterly direction, or it may be along the grounding line of West Antarctic ice streams that drain into this part of the ice shelf, and this would imply local advance of the West Antarctic ice sheet in a north-westerly direction. In either case large areas of comparatively flat grounded ice will be formed and these must ultimately offer increased resistance to the flow of ice into the ice shelf, so that ice velocities decrease and ice piles up in the lower reaches of the ice streams. In this way the advance would become consolidated and an equilibrium grounding-line position would finally be achieved. Sea-bed topography suggests that, if advance is indeed taking place, it could continue until Crary Ice Rise has been absorbed by the West Antarctic ice sheet, which event should signal a furore of activity from the various Place-Names Committees. If for no other reason this problem deserves further attention and the RIGGS data provide excellent guidelines to where additional measurements are required.
The ice shelf to the north of Crary Ice Rise, including the site of the RISP drill hole, appears to be approximately in equilibrium and this also may be so for the ice shelf near Roosevelt Island, where our results indicate either thickening or bottom melting of approximately 15 cm of ice year-1.
Reference HughesHughes (1975) suggested that the West Antarctic ice sheet currently may be collapsing, but our results provide no support for this hypothesis; indeed the ice sheet appears to be advancing into the south-east corner of the Ross Ice Shelf. However, we should note that growth at the edge of the West Antarctic ice sheet may be taking place at the same time as thinning of the central portions, which currently may be responding to earlier retreat of the ice-sheet margins (Reference ThomasThomas, 1976[b]). If this is the case then the West Antarctic ice sheet could be slumping to cover a larger area but with a lower summit elevation.
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by National Science Foundation grants DPP76-23047 and OPP72-05802. We are indebted to the numerous field assistants who helped us to gather data from the Ross Ice Shelf. We also thank W. MacDonald of the United States Geological Survey, who provided the precise position fixes on the ice shelf that were used to calculate ice velocities, and W. Chapman of the U.S.G.S., who allowed us to use strain-rate measurements that he had made at a station to the east of Roosevelt Island. An anonymous referee made suggestions that have helped us to clarify the text.