Документы

DOI

  • R. G. Bingham
  • Julien A. Bodart
  • Marie G. P. Cavitte
  • Ailsa Chung
  • Rebecca J. Sanderson
  • Johannes C. R. Sutter
  • Olaf Eisen
  • Nanna B. Karlsson
  • Joseph MacGregor
  • Neil Ross
  • Duncan A. Young
  • David W. Ashmore Ashmore
  • Andreas Born
  • Winnie Chu
  • Xiangbin Cui
  • Reinhard Drews
  • Steven Franke
  • Vikram Goel
  • John W. Goodge
  • A. Clara J. Henry
  • Antoine Hermant
  • Benjamin Hills
  • Nicholas Holschuh
  • Michelle R. Koutnik
  • Gwendolyn J.-M. C. Leysinger Vieli
  • Emma MacKie
  • Elisa Mantelli
  • Carlos Martín
  • Felix S. L. Ng
  • Falk M. Oraschewski
  • Felipe Napoleoni
  • Frederic Parrenin
  • Therese Rieckh
  • Rebecca Schlegel
  • Dustin M. Schroeder
  • Martin J. Siegert
  • Xueyuan Tang
  • Thomas O. Teisberg
  • Kate Winter
  • Shuai Yan
  • Harry Davis
  • Christine F. Dow
  • Tyler J. Fudge
  • Tom Jordan
  • Bernd Kulessa
  • Kenichi Matsuoka
  • Clara J. Nyqvist
  • Maryam Rahnemoonfar
  • Matthew R. Siegfried
  • Shivangini Singh
  • Vjeran Višnjević
  • Rodrigo Zamora
  • Alexandra Zuhr
Abstract. Radio-echo sounding (RES) has revealed an internal architecture within both the West and East Antarctic ice sheets that records their depositional, deformational and melting histories. Crucially, RES-imaged internal-reflecting horizons, tied to ice-core age–depth profiles, can be treated as isochrones that record the age–depth structure across the Antarctic ice sheets. These enable the reconstruction of past climate and ice dynamical processes on large scales, which are complementary to but more spatially extensive than commonly used proxy records (e.g. former ice limits constrained by cosmogenic dating or offshore sediment sequences) around Antarctica. We review the progress towards building a pan-Antarctic age–depth model from these data by first introducing the relevant RES datasets that have been acquired across Antarctica over the last 6 decades (focussing specifically on those that detected internal-reflecting horizons) and outlining the processing steps typically undertaken to visualise, trace and date (by intersection with ice cores or modelling) the RES-imaged isochrones. We summarise the scientific applications for which Antarctica's internal architecture has been used to date and present a pathway to expanding Antarctic radiostratigraphy across the continent to provide a benchmark for a wider range of investigations: (1) identification of optimal sites for retrieving new ice-core palaeoclimate records targeting different periods; (2) reconstruction of surface mass balance on millennial or historical timescales; (3) estimation of basal melting and geothermal heat flux from radiostratigraphy and comprehensive mapping of basal-ice units to complement inferences from other geophysical and geological methods; (4) advancement of the knowledge of volcanic activity and fallout across Antarctica; and (5) refinement of numerical models that leverage radiostratigraphy to tune time-varying accumulation, basal melting and ice flow, firstly to reconstruct past behaviour and then to reduce uncertainties in projecting future ice-sheet behaviour.
Язык оригиналаанглийский
Страницы (с-по)4611-4655
Число страниц45
ЖурналCryosphere
Том19
Номер выпуска10
DOI
СостояниеОпубликовано - 20 окт 2025

ID: 142644526