Objectives, Instrumentation, and Analysis
The objective of the work was to investigate the electrical structure of an ice shelf along a flow line in an area where substantial surface melting occurs in summer. Apparent resistivity profiles were obtained at three sites along a flow line of Good-enough Glacier which crosses George VI Ice Shelf at lat. 72°S. (Fig. 1). The area is a percolation/Soaked zone with a 10 m ice temperature of −10°C (Reference ReynoldsReynolds, 1981[a]). To provide a comparison with the ice shelf, a profile was obtained at an airstrip 5 km west of Rothera station, Adelaide Island (lat. 67°34’S., long. 68°08’W.), a flat site at the head of the accumulation area of Wormald Ice Piedmont, where the ice is close to its melting point. All resistivity measurements were carried out in summer with surface conditions given in Table I.
A standard Schlumberger four-electrode configuration was used. Current was provided by a bank of up to six 90 V dry cells. The electrodes were stainless steel tubes 1 m long and 19 mm in outside diameter. The potential and current were monitored by Keithley 602B electrometers and output to a Minigor 520 XY-Yt chart recorder to display the mutual decay of voltage and current. The decay is linear in agreement with Ohm’s law and determines a resistance R from which an apparent resistivity ρa of the medium can be computed. The well-known relationship for the Schlum-berger array is
where 2a and b are the separations of the current and voltage electrodes respectively. Full details of the data reduction and analysis are given by Reference ReynoldsReynolds (1982).
The apparent-resistivity profiles have been interpreted using a computer program based on Ghosh’s convolution method (Reference GhoshGhosh, 1971). The program synthesizes an apparent-resistivity profile for an n-layered model in which the variables are layer thickness and resistivity. Model profiles were compared with the field data and the variables adjusted by trial and error to obtain an acceptable match.
Resistivity of George VI Ice Shelf
Values of apparent resistivity are listed in Table II and illustrated in Figure 2. For each profile the data are shown with standard deviations. Superimposed are the synthesized curves which fit the data well. At the foot of each figure are the layer models used to generate the appropriate curves. In each model, the bottom layer is chosen to represent cold water of oceanic salinity and resistivity 0.3 Ω m.
Profiles for RJ and RK shown in Figure 2a and b have been published previously and discussed in detail by Reference ReynoldsReynolds (1982). The small variation of resistivity found with depth is due to the ice shelf having only a narrow range of temperature and nearly constant density. The percolation and refreezing of melt water ensured high densities near the surface. In addition, ice of the same density, whether formed by compaction or percolation and refreezing, has the same resistivity (Reference Reynolds and ParenReynolds and Paren, 1980). The essential difference between the model for M15 (Fig. 2c) and those for RJ and RK is that the bulk of the ice shelf has a resistivity value of 71.5 KΩ m compared to 48 KΩ m further down-stream along the flow line. Within an ice shelf near its grounding line, ice may be found at a colder temperature than at the glacier surface, but this cold sink will be progressively eliminated whilst the ice is afloat and warmed by the air and the sea (Reference PatersonPaterson, 1981). M15 is only 10 km from the grounding line and has been afloat for just 14 years (based on data from Reference Bishop and WaltonBishop and Walton, 1981). In such a short period of time, only the lowermost portion of the total ice column reflects changes in basal conditions since passing the grounding line. For M15, the characteristic thickness Z affected by heat flow at the base of the ice shelf is around 45 m as calculated from heat-flow theory (where Z = 2/Ki t, t being the time since crossing the grounding line and Ki the thermal diffusivity = 36 M2a−1). Thus, except in the basal region, M15 has a temperature structure determined by its previous history when grounded. Changes in temperature within the ice shelf seem the most likely explanation for the lateral trend in resistivity while the ice flows from M15 to RJ in 155 years. However, an unrealistically high degree of warming (9 deg) is needed to convert ice of resistivity 72 KΩ m to 50 KΩ m if the activation energy for the resistivity of ice is 0.22 eV as is suggested later. It is not known how so much warming could occur or by what other mechanism the 72 KΩ m resistivity could decrease to 50 KΩ m as the ice flows westwards.
The temperature regime of an ice shelf is strongly influenced by the rate of melting (or freezing) at its base. For M15, Reference Bishop and WaltonBishop and Walton (1981) estimated to be 6 m a−1. A temperature gradient in the basal region can be accommodated in the model for M15 by introducing a 20 m thick layer with a resistivity of 51 KΩ m at the ice-shelf base. The introduction of thin basal layers of lower resistivity ice would not seriously perturb the fitting of profiles RK and RJ. A more sophisticated analysis for site RK has been provided by S. Shabtaie based on a computer program developed by Reference BentleyBentley (1977). The analysis permits resistivity to vary continuously with depth through an assumed dependence of resistivity on density and on temperature. In principle a temperature profile and hence the heat flow at the base may be verified from the resistivities. Shabtaie deduced a basal melt rate of 1 m a−1 at RK. An independent calculation based on similar assumptions gave minimum melting rates of 1 m a−1 at RK and 2 m a−1 at RJ (Reference ReynoldsReynolds, 1982). Aspects of the sites are far from ideal for either calculation. By necessity, horizontal advection has been disregarded and the temperature dependence of resistivity, although poorly known above −10° C was given an activation energy of 0.15 eV. Both factors militate against a reliable determination of melt rate, although other evidence suggests 1–2 m a−1 is the norm for the ice shelf (Reference Potter, Potter, Paren and LoynesPotter and others, 1984).
Figure 3 shows the structure of the ice shelf using data from the georesistivity profiles, radio echo-sounding, and ground survey. The surface layers at RJ and M15 are consistent with a top layer with a resistivity of 140–156 KΩ m, underlain by a layer common to the three sites with a resistivity in the range 60–78 KΩ m. The higher resistivity layer is thought to be firn through which some melt-water percolation has occurred. The lower layer probably has a higher density and on the evidence from site RK appears to be associated with firn which has been saturated by melt water and refrozen. At RK the presumed drier firn layer is absent, and the second layer is appreciably thicker than elsewhere. The three sites lie along a flow line parallel to long undulations formed as a result of ice movement, and it was intended to locate all resistivity arrays on the crest of one undulation. However, RK was inadvertently located to one side, closer to an adjacent trough. In such troughs the firn becomes saturated by melt water and the ice layers are thicker because melt-water lakes tend to form there (Reference ReynoldsReynolds, 1981[b]).
Resistivity of Wormald Ice Piedmont
Values of apparent resistivity are listed in Table III and illustrated in Figure 4. The profile confirms that the glacier is land-based and has a lower resistivity than the underlying bedrock. Three layer-models generated nearly identical profiles. Two models (A and B) were developed independently of other data, and provided a total ice thickness of 150 ± 10 m. The third model (C) was constrained to an ice thickness of 170 m obtained from radio echo-sounding. The resistivities of the surface ice layer and of the bedrock were common to all three models, 3.5 MΩ m and 10 MΩ m respectively. The lithology of nunataks close by is known: Andean intrusives such as gabbro-granodiorite predominate along with uncorrelated (?) Upper Jurassic volcanic and sedimentary rocks (Reference DewarDewar, 1970). Rocks such as these have resistivities of the order of 1–100 MΩ m (Reference Telford, Telford, Geldart, Sheriff and KeysTelford and others, 1976), spanning the range deduced for the bedrock. The resistivity of the surface ice layer (3.5 MΩ m) is a factor of twenty higher than that of any surface layer on George VI Ice Shelf. It lies within the range of resistivities for the surface layers of temperate glaciers (0.3–14 MΩ m) reported by Reference RöthlisbergerRöthlisberger (1967) and Reference Röthlisberger and VögtliRöthlisberger and Vögtli (1967). Thus the surface resistivity is compatible with the thermal regime of an accumulation region of a temperate glacier.
The resistivity of the lower ice layers (0.07 to 0.4 MΩ m) of Wormald Ice Piedmont is more difficult to interpret. According to Reference Röthlisberger and VögtliRöthlisberger and Vögtli (1967) the range 10–120 MΩ m is centeracteristic of the resistivity of deep ice in temperate glaciers. Having collected together data from many georesistivity surveys they noted “a certain tendency seems to exist in the distribution of resistivities, so that the highest values occur in the oldest ice, the lowest in young ice and below ice falls”. Reference Glen, Glen, Homer and ParenGlen and others (1977) saw this as the result of a reduction of impurities down-glacier by recrystallization processes and by melt water purging and washing out impurities. On Wormald Ice Piedmont, the resistivity profile seems to indicate that the concentration of impurities increases with depth with the older ice being less resistive than the surface. However, this explanation is conjectural in the absence of deep ice cores and precise temperature measurements. Wormald Ice Piedmont, if temperate, is the least resistive of any temperate glaciers so far studied electrically.
Comparison of Ice Resistivities in Polar Regions
Georesistivity investigations at 27 sites on glaciers in the Arctic and Antarctic have been compiled in Table IV. From this compilation, measurements of the resistivity of ice from depths greater than 100 m have been plotted in Figure 5 against the estimated in situ temperature. This updates two earlier presentations of the then available data (Fig. 2 of Reference Paren, Whalley, Whalley, Jones and GoldParen, 1973 and Fig. 4 of Reference Glen and ParenGlen and Paren, 1975). Three lines are superimposed on Figure 5. The first is the regression line for the field data (dashed). This line has an activation energy of 0.22 ± 0.03 eV and gives an average resistivity of 55 k m at −10° C, 80 KΩ m at −20° C, and 350 to m at −52° C. The regression line is unaltered even if the Dome C data of Reference Thyssen and ShabtaieThyssen and Shabtaie (1983) are excluded from the analysis. Reviewing data from just six sites, Reference Thyssen and ShabtaieThyssen and Shabtaie (1983) suggest that the resistivity of ice is constrained in an even narrower band: 67 ± 7 KΩ m at in at −20° C and activation energy 0.25 eV. Three results have been omitted from the present regression; results 14a and 14b since they may be in error by a factor of two or more (Reference BentleyBentley, 1979) and result 24 from Wormald Ice Piedmont since its thermal regime is temperate. The other lines are the deduced d.c. resistivity for two deep ice cores measured in the laboratory over a wide temperature and frequency range using a simple guarded-electrode dielectric cell. In such an arrangement electrode interface effects dominate the low-frequency response and the assessment of a true d.c. resistivity from a.c. measurements is difficult. Nevertheless, Figure 5 shows that the ice-core data are in accord with the field measurements. The more resistive ice core is from Byrd Station, Antarctica (Reference Fitzgerald and ParenFitzgerald and Paren, 1975) which was incorrectly plotted in Figure 4 of Reference Glen and ParenGlen and Paren (1975). The other is the mean from four sets of data from Camp Century, Greenland (Reference Paren, Whalley, Whalley, Jones and GoldParen, 1973). The Camp Century data indicate that resistivity is independent of temperature above −10° C. At lower temperatures it has an activation energy of 0.21 eV, similar to the value of 0.22 eV for the regression line and 0.23 eV for the Byrd Station data. The most reliable data in Figure 5 should be those determined by field measurements over ice shelves of known thickness due to their simple geometry and known sub-ice environment. There is particularly close numerical agreement between the resistivities of ice from George VI Ice Shelf (Results 22–23 and Fig. 2) and from Ross Ice Shelf (Results 13, 15–19), even though the upper layers of George VI Ice Shelf are formed principally by local percolation and refreezing of melt water rather than by compaction, the usual process at lower surface temperatures. In contrast a major modification to the electrical behaviour of part of the Byrd ice core was found by Reference Fitzgerald and ParenFitzgerald and Paren (1975) after melting it and refreezing it in the laboratory. However, they examined the samples only hours after refreezing them, whereas the ice layers near the surface of George VI Ice Shelf are much older. It is clear that experiments are required to investigate time-dependent processes in natural ice.
The sites at which the resistivity soundings have been carried out vary greatly in their physical setting. Total impurity concentration, altitude, grain-size, crystal fabric, accumulation rate, incidence of melting, age, and strain history can all be different. We suggest that these factors cannot be strongly linked to resistivity. Reference MaccagnanMaccagnan (unpublished) believes that in the polar regions the narrow range of resistivity is a result of the fairly uniform deposition of Aitken nuclei which consist of hydrated sulphuric acid. The sulphate ion, SO4 2− is a major impurity within continental ice sheets, though nitrate (NO3 −) may also be important. The level of background “excess sulphate” is determined by the accumulation rate. The range is probably 15 to 50 p.p.b. at the Arctic sites and 25 to 50 p.p.b. at the Antarctic sites of Table IV (Reference HerronHerron, 1982). In fact, it is difficult to estimate the sulphate concentration for deep ice from any nf the ice-shelf sites, because the snow will have been deposited far away. No resistivity-sulphate dependence is discernible from within the scatter of Figure 5. However, in polar ice sheets, internal reflections have been detected by radio echo-sounding (Reference Robin, de Q. Robin, Evans and BaileyRobin and others, 1969) and are thought to be due to elevated concentrations of volcanogenic sulphate (Reference MillarMillar, 1982). Such sulphate-rich layers have also been associated with peaks in the static electrical conductivity as measured in polar ice cores (Reference HammerHammer, 1980).
Some of the scatter in Figure 5 may result from inaccurate interpretation of profiles in ambiguous terrain and incorrect estimates of the relevant temperature. In the temperature range −10° C to −25° C the true resistivity of deep polar ice averaged over many years of deposition varies by less than a factor of two from the regression line of Figure 5. The variation at a given temperature is small by comparison with the three orders of magnitude that separate the most resistive temperate ice from the non-temperate ice of the polar regions.
Conclusion
Georesistivity measurements made along a flow line on George VI Ice Shelf have established that throughout the thickness of the ice shelf the ice behaves in a comparable way to that formed in colder polar environments. This is an important finding since the flow line is in a transitional percolation-soaked zone and melt water percolates and refreezes in the firn - a process which is absent at similar in situ, temperatures deep in dry polar glaciers where similar resistivities are measured. A compilation of all available data show that polar ice has a well defined resistivity irrespective of the physical setting and history of the ice. Typically the resistivity is within a factor of two of 80 K Ωm at −20°C with an activation energy of 0.22 eV. In polar regions, only temperate glaciers such as Wormald Ice Piedmont and Glacier Cook on Îles Kerguelen (Reference AndrieuxAndrieux, 1970) have resistivities which deviate from the now well-documented values for polar ice.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to S.J. Artis and J.A. Jewell who assisted with field work on George VI Ice Shelf, and to J.L. Wade who helped with computing.