Published April 26, 2019 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Formation of pedestalled, relict lakes on the McMurdo Ice Shelf, Antarctica

  • 1. University of Chicago
  • 2. University of Colorado Boulder
  • 3. United States Geological Survey

Description

Surface debris covers much of the western portion of the McMurdo Ice Shelf and has a strong influence on the local surface albedo and energy balance. Differential ablation between debris-covered and debris-free areas creates an unusual heterogeneous surface of topographically low, high-ablation, and topographically raised ('pedestalled'), low-ablation areas. Analysis of Landsat and MODIS satellite imagery from 1999 to 2018, alongside field observations from the 2016/2017 austral summer, shows that pedestalled relict lakes ('pedestals') form when an active surface meltwater lake that develops in the summer, freezes-over in winter, resulting in the lake-bottom debris being masked by a high-albedo, superimposed, ice surface. If this ice surface fails to melt during a subsequent melt season, it experiences reduced surface ablation relative to the surrounding debris-covered areas of the ice shelf. We propose that this differential ablation, and resultant hydrostatic and flexural readjustments of the ice shelf, causes the former supraglacial lake surface to become increasingly pedestalled above the lower topography of the surrounding ice shelf. Consequently, meltwater streams cannot flow onto these pedestalled features, and instead divert around them. We suggest that the development of pedestals has a significant influence on the surface-energy balance, hydrology and flexure of the ice shelf.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1017/jog.2019.17
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:13686

Funding

National Science Foundation
PLR-1443126
NASA Earth and Space Science
NNX15AN44H
Leverhulme/Newton Trust
Early Career Fellowship
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences
Postdoctoral Visiting Fellowship
CIRES
Sabbatical Fellowship

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Geophysical Sciences