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The retreat of Jones Ice Shelf, Antarctic Peninsula

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 September 2017

Adrian J. Fox
Affiliation:
British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET, UK E-mail: [email protected]
David G. Vaughan
Affiliation:
British Antarctic Survey, Natural Environment Research Council, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET, UK E-mail: [email protected]
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Abstract

In recent decades, several ice shelves along the Antarctic Peninsula have diminished in size as a result of climate warming. Using aerial photographic, satellite and survey data we document a similar retreat of Jones Ice Shelf, which was another small ice shelf on the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula. This ice shelf was roughly stable between 1947 and 1969, but in the early 1970s it began to retreat and had completely disappeared by early 2003. Jones Ice Shelf has two ice fronts only a few kilometres apart and its retreat provides a unique opportunity to examine how different ice fronts retreat when subjected to similar climate forcing. We mapped the retreat of both the east and west ice fronts of Jones Ice Shelf and found that, although individual episodes of retreat may be related to particularly warm summers, the overall progress of retreat of the two ice fronts has been rather different. This suggests that in this case the course of retreat is controlled by the geometry of the embayment and location of pinning points as well as climatic events.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 2005

Introduction

The absence of ice shelves along the northwest coast of the Antarctic Peninsula prompted Reference MercerMercer (1978) to propose the existence of a climatic limit of viability for ice shelves. He went on to predict that atmospheric warming would cause a southerly migration of this limit of viability and a loss of ice shelves. Since Mercer made his predictions, warming has taken place on the Antarctica Peninsula (see Reference Vaughan, Marshall, Connolley, King and MulvaneyVaughan and others, 2001 for a recent assessment of this warming) and many ice shelves around the Antarctic Peninsula have indeed shown evidence of retreat: Wordie Ice Shelf (Reference Doake and VaughanDoake and Vaughan, 1991);Prince Gustav Ice Shelf and the ice shelf that formerly occupied Larsen Inlet, Larsen A ice shelf (Reference Vaughan and DoakeVaughan and Doake, 1996); Müller Ice Shelf (Reference WardWard, 1995); Wilkins Ice Shelf (Reference Scambos, Hulbe, Fahnestock and BohlanderScambos and others, 2000);George VI Ice Shelf (Reference Lucchitta and RosanovaLucchitta and Rosanova, 1998);and most recently, Larsen B ice shelf (Reference Scambos, Hulbe, Fahnestock, Domack, Burnett, Leventer, Conley, Kirby and BindschadlerScambos and others, 2003). The pattern and rate of ice-shelf retreat appears consistent with the key driver being atmospheric warming (Reference Vaughan and DoakeVaughan and Doake, 1996), and various mechanisms have been implicated in driving retreat (Reference Scambos, Hulbe, Fahnestock, Domack, Burnett, Leventer, Conley, Kirby and BindschadlerScambos and others, 2003) and final-stage collapse (Reference Doake, Corr, Rott, Skvarca and YoungDoake and others, 1998; Reference MacAyeal, Scambos, Hulbe and FahnestockMacAyeal and others, 2003). A similar pattern of retreat, that also appears to be linked to climate change, has been noted in marine and tidewater glaciers along the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula (Reference Cook, Fox, Vaughan and FerrignoCook and others, 2005).

Jones Ice Shelf is the only ice shelf of significant size on the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula whose history remains to be described, but given its location, 25 km south of Müller Ice Shelf and 200 km north of Wordie Ice Shelf, its retreat is required to complete the pattern of retreat and confirm that it conforms with the progression of the limit of viability (Reference Morris, Vaughan, Domack, Burnett, Leventer, Conley, Kirby and BindschadlerMorris and Vaughan, 2003). Here, we present a history for Jones Ice Shelf, and discuss its implications for our understanding of ice-shelf retreat.

Jones Ice Shelf was located among islands on the west coast of the Antarctic Peninsula (67º30′ S, 66º55′ W; Fig. 1). It was first traversed and surveyed in 1949 by members of the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (Reference Hattersley-SmithHattersley-Smith, 1991, p.316). At that time it was about 9.5 km long, a little less than 25 km2 in area and it blocked Jones Channel between Bigourdan Fjord and Bourgeois Fjord (Fig. 2). Jones Ice Shelf was unusual in having two separate ice fronts, one calving into Bigourdan Fjord, the other into Bourgeois Fjord. Glacier flowlines and the sparse radioecho sounding data available (BEDMAP, http://www.antarctica.ac.uk.bedmap) indicate that the shelf ice was non-porous and therefore glacier-derived, mainly from the 10 km long Heim Glacier, which flows south from a 150 km2 catchment, part of a large ice field on the Antarctic Peninsula. This ice field also feeds the 50 km2 Müller Ice Shelf to the north. Photogrammetric measurements of the ice-shelf surface altitude (Fig. 3) suggest a maximum draft in 1989 of about 180–200m, thinning to about 50 m near the ice fronts. Jones Ice Shelf has never been the subject of a systematic study, so few other data exist for it: the bathymetry of the Jones Channel is unknown, and we are not aware of any field measurements of ice velocity, strain rate, accumulation or the basal melting rate. Since it is no longer possible to make such measurements, we have restricted this study to a presentation of evidence from archival aerial photography and satellite imagery, and a discussion of whether the retreat of Jones Ice Shelf conforms to two of the most important theories concerning ice- shelf retreat.

Fig. 1. Location map for the Antarctic Peninsula. The ice shelves mentioned in the text are numbered. 1: Wordie Ice Shelf, 2: Prince Gustav Ice Shelf, 3: the ice shelf that formerly occupied Larsen Inlet, 4: Larsen A ice shelf, 5: Wilkins Ice Shelf, 6: George VI Ice Shelf, 7: Larsen B ice shelf.

Fig. 2. Positions of the ice front of Jones Ice Shelf derived from the data sources listed in Table 1. Vertical aerial photography and Landsat Thematic Mapper (reliability better than ±90m): 1986, 1989, 1991, 1996, 1998, 2001, 2003. Oblique aerial photography (better than ±300 m): 1947, 1969. Landsat multispectral scanner (mixed reliability): 1978. The boundary between the west and east ice shelves is a line between C and D. Arrows indicate glacier flow direction. White discs denote rock outcrops used in the geo-referencing process. The corner ticks define the area covered in Figure 5b.

Fig. 3. Photogrammetric measurement of the surface elevation of Jones Ice Shelf from IfAG aerial photography (1989). Contour values are in metres. The 25 m contour corresponds closely with the fragment of ice remaining in 2001.

Methods

We used a section of a Landsat Thematic Mapper image from February 1986 as a base image to which further images and aerial photographs from various dates were geo- referenced (Table 1). The base image (pixel size 30 m) was fixed to the British Antarctic Survey (BAS) triangulation–trilateration geodetic survey network by the Bundesamt für Kartographie und Geodäsie (formerly Institut für Angewandte Geodäsie (IfAG)), Germany, as part of a wider collaboration for topographic mapping. The method was described by Reference Sievers, Grindel and MeierSievers and others (1989). Ice fronts from vertical aerial photographs were fixed to the base image with an accuracy of better than ±3 pixels (90 m), but those from oblique aerial photographs and a low-resolution Landsat multispectral scanner (MSS) image were positioned to better than ±10 pixels (300 m). The method of acquisition is used to categorize the reliability of the geo-referencing of the data sources. Ice-shelf front positions for the various years were then digitized on screen into a Geographicel Information System (Arc/Info).

Table 1. Summary of data sources used. No image scale is given for satellite imagery or oblique aerial photography

Vertical aerial photography

Ice front positions for 1957, 1991, 1996, 1998, 2001 and 2003 were interpreted from vertical aerial photography at scales ranging from 1 : 20 000 to 1 : 30 000, and overlaid onto the base image using rock outcrops visible on both photography and imagery as a guide (Fig. 2).

The geodetic survey network in this sparsely surveyed area was insufficient for photogrammetric mapping of the ice front positions from these photographs, but the larger ground coverage of the 1 : 70 000 scale IfAG photographs (1989) did include enough ground control for photogrammetry. Comparison between the photogrammetric ice fronts and those compiled by manual plotting from the photography onto the satellite image base map showed that the latter method could be carried out with an accuracy of better than ±90 m for vertical aerial photography.

Oblique aerial photography

The ice front positions for 1947 and 1969 were plotted from oblique aerial photography only. These positions have greater uncertainty and were given a lower reliability. Image quality and position in the depth of field of the photography are the key determinants of registration accuracy. The photo quality for the 1947 and 1969 data is acceptable and the ice fronts are well positioned in the photographs and in the narrower parts of Jones Channel, close to conspicuous rock outcrops, allowing their positions to be determined with an accuracy of better than 300 m.

Satellite imagery

The ice front position for 1986 was digitized directly from the base image and so is accurate to the 30 m resolution of the image. The ice front positions for 1978 are derived from 90 m resolution Landsat MSS imagery. The western ice front can be clearly seen on the image and was plotted accurate to the resolution of the imagery. Differentiating between the ice shelf and sea ice is difficult for the eastern ice front and this position is more approximate.

Discussion

The positions of the ice fronts of Jones Ice Shelf shown in Figure 2 allowed us to calculate the areal changes for the east and west portions and for the complete ice shelf (Fig. 4a). There has been a clear retreat of Jones Ice Shelf since 1947, culminating in disconnection of the ice shelf from Blaiklock Island at ‘A’ (Fig. 2) sometime between December 1998 and January 2001, and complete disappearance by January 2003. These changes are sufficient to confirm that Jones Ice Shelf retreated during the latter half of the 20th century, which is entirely in line with the earlier predictions (Reference MercerMercer 1978; Reference Vaughan and DoakeVaughan and Doake 1996) and thus provides confirmation that all the ice shelves close to the limit of viability have retreated over this period (Reference Morris, Vaughan, Domack, Burnett, Leventer, Conley, Kirby and BindschadlerMorris and Vaughan, 2003).

Fig. 4. (a) Area of ice shelf calculated from ice fronts shown in Figure 2. (b) The total positive degree-days for each austral summer calculated from 3 and 1 hourly temperature observations at Faraday/Vernadsky Station (dashed line) and Rothera Station (full line).

The retreat histories of neighbouring ice shelves – Wordie Ice Shelf, 200 km to the south and Müller Ice Shelf, 25 km to the north – have already been described. Wordie Ice Shelf advanced slightly between 1937 and 1966, but began a rapid retreat between 1966 and 1974 (Reference Vaughan and DoakeVaughan and Doake, 1996). Müller Ice Shelf, however, showed a substantial advance between 1947 and 1956, followed by an intermittent retreat to the present (Reference WardWard, 1995). Although the observations available for the Jones, Müller and Wordie ice shelves are not always simultaneous, the following comparisons can be drawn. The retreat history of the eastern portion of Jones Ice Shelf is very similar to that of Wordie Ice Shelf (see fig. 2 of Reference Vaughan and DoakeVaughan and Doake, 1996), with a minor advance from 1947 to 1969, followed by a generally progressive retreat. The retreat history for the western portion of Jones Ice Shelf was different, with no strong evidence for retreat before 1991, and thereafter accelerating retreat and eventually a relatively sudden and almost complete collapse by 2001. This is more comparable to ice shelves on the eastern coast of the Antarctic Peninsula (e.g. Prince Gustav Ice Shelf;see fig. 2 of Reference Vaughan and DoakeVaughan and Doake, 1996).

The differences between the progress of retreat on the eastern and western ice fronts are significant: Since the two ice fronts are only about 10km apart and they are similarly sheltered from ocean swells by the topography, remnant sea ice and floating ice in the Jones Channel, we assume that they experienced similar climatic driving and hence provide a unique opportunity for comparison (Fig. 2). In one aspect, however, they were clearly different: the embayment that contained the eastern, Bourgeois Fjord side, portion of Jones Ice Shelf widens from 1 km wide at the 1996 ice front position, to 2.6 km at the position of the 1947 ice front. Ice flow in this portion of the ice shelf was thus generally divergent. In contrast, ice flow in the western, Bigourdan Fjord portion of Jones Channel was convergent, closing from its maximum width of 4.6 km near the 1998 ice front position, to only 1.75 km at its narrowest point at the northern tip of Blaiklock Island. The effect of this convergent embayment was reinforced by the presence of a small ice rise at ‘B’ in Figure 2, which acted as a pinning point, further constricting flow.

According to the analysis of the retreat and eventual collapse of Larsen B ice shelf presented by Reference Doake, Corr, Rott, Skvarca and YoungDoake and others (1998), these contrasting, divergent and convergent ice-flow regimes would have created substantially different strain- rate regimes, resulting in a different progression of retreat in each part of the ice shelf. Reference Doake, Corr, Rott, Skvarca and YoungDoake and others (1998) described a ‘compressive arch’, which will occur under convergent ice flow patterns, in which one of the principal strain rates in the ice shelf is compressive. The compressive arch is generated across the ice shelf, curving inland between pinning points at the narrowest point in the embayment, and is analogous to the arch of compressive forces that allows a vertical stone arch to be stable even after erosion of material from its underside. The discussion by Doake and others suggested that the presence of a strong compressive arch would affect the progress of retreat of the ice shelf;while the arch remained intact it would impede further ice front retreat, but, once the arch was breached, rapid retreat and perhaps collapse was likely to occur.

In the case of Jones Ice Shelf, the western arm, with the strongly convergent ice flow required to pass through the narrow ice front and past pinning point ‘B’, would have produced a strong compressive arch, but the eastern portion, having generally divergent ice flow, and hence extensive strain rates in both principal directions, would not. Our observations show that Doake and others’ interpretation of the importance of the compressive arch in controlling the progress of retreat appears to be supported on Jones Ice Shelf. In the eastern portion (in the divergent bay and without a strong compressive arch) retreat occurred almost linearly in time, while in the western portion (in the convergent bay and with a strong compressive arch) retreat was much slower for several decades and then collapse proceeded rapidly. This behaviour appears to confirm that while climatic conditions initiate and drive ice-shelf retreat, the pattern of the retreat is strongly affected by the geometry of the embayment. Furthermore, some ice-shelf geometries could slow the progress of ice-shelf retreat but eventually lead to the rapid collapse, while other geometries lead to more progressive change.

Direct measurements of ice thickness on Jones Ice Shelf are sparse. In 1974/75 the western portion was found to be between 170 and 250 m thick, and in 1994/95 the eastern portion was between 150 and 200 m. However, the surface elevation measured from the 1989 photogrammetry gives some indication of the ice thickness at that time (Fig. 3), showing a thinner portion of ice in the northwest. The subsequent pattern of retreat was not preferentially across this thin area, suggesting that the ice thickness was not a key factor in determining the pattern of retreat. The lack of repeated measurements of ice thickness means it is not possible to determine if a change in the basal melt rate was important, as was suggested by Reference Shepherd, Wingham, Payne and SkvarcaShepherd and others, for Larsen B (2003).

While the record from Jones Ice Shelf does appear to support the idea of a geometric control on the progress of ice shelf retreat, there are probably too few data to determine if it supports the other influential hypothesis concerning ice- shelf retreat: that melt pools are both a precursor and a driver of rapid ice-shelf retreat (Reference Scambos, Hulbe, Fahnestock and BohlanderScambos and others, 2000; Reference Van den BroekeVan den Broeke, 2005). Firstly, only a few melt pools (e.g. Fig. 5) have been identified on the surface of this ice shelf, even though all the imagery was acquired during the austral summer. However, it is possible that meltwater was present as a wider area of saturated firn rather than melt pools which still functioned as a water reservoir for fracturing of the shelf ice. Reference Scambos, Hulbe, Fahnestock and BohlanderScambos and others (2000) described this effect for the Wilkins Ice Shelf. Secondly, there is no clear correlation between the number of positive degree-days, a good indicator for the volume of meltwater produced (Reference Braithwaite and ZhangBraithwaite and Zhang, 1999), and the rate of retreat, beyond a general observation that the retreat has occurred in a period of increasing positive degree-days. Figure 4b shows positive degree-days for individual years for meteorological stations at Faraday/Vernadsky and Rothera (only 20 km from Jones Ice Shelf) alongside the progress of retreat. It is not possible to determine how well the episodes of retreat are correlated to years with high amounts of melt, and without more observations of ice-shelf extent, especially for the early period, such a comparison will not be possible in future.

Fig. 5. Detail of Jones Ice Shelf in (a) 1989 and (b) 2001. The Jones Channel typically contains much remnant sea ice and floating ice.

Figure 5 shows that removal of the ice shelf has resulted in increased crevassing and could have coincided with an increase in ice velocity above the grounding line on Heim Glacier, although this has not been confirmed by direct observation; a similar effect was reported by Reference Rott, Rack, Skvarca and De Angelis.Rott and others (2002) after the loss of Larsen A ice shelf.

Conclusions

Jones Ice Shelf has retreated in line with the other climatically driven ice-shelf retreats around the Antarctic Peninsula. After a period of relative stability between 1947 and 1968, retreat began and progressively accelerated without noticeable readvances. Thus the Jones Ice Shelf retreat further confirms the overall pattern that the limit of viability has migrated south with the recent rapid regional warming of the Antarctic Peninsula.

The western and eastern portions of Jones Ice Shelf lie in convergent and divergent embayments, respectively. Comparison of the retreat of the east and west portions supports modelling studies (Reference Doake, Corr, Rott, Skvarca and YoungDoake and others, 1998) which suggest that the geometry of the embayment modulates the pattern of retreat of an ice shelf and can sometimes produce a dramatic final-stage collapse.

Although surface melting has occurred on Jones Ice Shelf and may have been important to the overall progress of the retreat, there is insufficient evidence to determine whether melt-pooling caused specific retreat events, or that the size of a particular episode of retreat can be easily related to the degree of melting (cf. Reference Scambos, Hulbe, Fahnestock and BohlanderScambos and others, 2000).

While the thickness of the ice shelf varies by a factor of three over the western part of the Jones Ice Shelf, it does not appear to be a controlling factor for the progress of retreat.

Acknowledgements

Constructive comments from T. Scambos and K. Cuffey significantly improved this paper.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Location map for the Antarctic Peninsula. The ice shelves mentioned in the text are numbered. 1: Wordie Ice Shelf, 2: Prince Gustav Ice Shelf, 3: the ice shelf that formerly occupied Larsen Inlet, 4: Larsen A ice shelf, 5: Wilkins Ice Shelf, 6: George VI Ice Shelf, 7: Larsen B ice shelf.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Positions of the ice front of Jones Ice Shelf derived from the data sources listed in Table 1. Vertical aerial photography and Landsat Thematic Mapper (reliability better than ±90m): 1986, 1989, 1991, 1996, 1998, 2001, 2003. Oblique aerial photography (better than ±300 m): 1947, 1969. Landsat multispectral scanner (mixed reliability): 1978. The boundary between the west and east ice shelves is a line between C and D. Arrows indicate glacier flow direction. White discs denote rock outcrops used in the geo-referencing process. The corner ticks define the area covered in Figure 5b.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Photogrammetric measurement of the surface elevation of Jones Ice Shelf from IfAG aerial photography (1989). Contour values are in metres. The 25 m contour corresponds closely with the fragment of ice remaining in 2001.

Figure 3

Table 1. Summary of data sources used. No image scale is given for satellite imagery or oblique aerial photography

Figure 4

Fig. 4. (a) Area of ice shelf calculated from ice fronts shown in Figure 2. (b) The total positive degree-days for each austral summer calculated from 3 and 1 hourly temperature observations at Faraday/Vernadsky Station (dashed line) and Rothera Station (full line).

Figure 5

Fig. 5. Detail of Jones Ice Shelf in (a) 1989 and (b) 2001. The Jones Channel typically contains much remnant sea ice and floating ice.