Joint 52nd Northeastern Annual Section / 51st North-Central Annual Section Meeting - 2017

Paper No. 25-5
Presentation Time: 1:30 PM-5:30 PM

GRAVIMETRIC DETERMINATION OF THE THICKNESS OF TAKU GLACIER: IMPACT OF GLACIER THICKNESS ON SUBGLACIAL HYDROLOGY AND POTENTIAL EROSION


HAMM, Tae, 711 E. Boldt Way SPC 688, Appleton, WI 54911, potaetoandhamm@gmail.com

High resolution measurements of spatial ice thickness variability on the Juneau Icefield are critical to an understanding of current glacial dynamics in the Coast Mountains of Southeast Alaska. In particular, such data are lacking on the Taku Glacier, a tidewater glacier in the Juneau region whose unique advance has slowed in recent years. Significantly, such information is necessary to develop an accurate description of ice dynamics as well as sub-surface hydrology and bedrock erosion. Utilizing relative gravimetry, we sought to modify existing parametrized models of ice thickness with field measurements taken along the centerline of the Taku. Here we present a three-dimensional representation of ice thickness for the Taku, based on in situ observations from July 2016. As the glacier approaches a potential period of rapid terminal retreat, this data gives refined physical information prior to this potential juncture in the tidewater cycle-an observation that may yield insight into marine ice sheet instabilities more broadly.