2011
DOI: 10.5194/tc-5-139-2011
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Thermal structure and drainage system of a small valley glacier (Tellbreen, Svalbard), investigated by ground penetrating radar

Abstract: Abstract. Proglacial icings accumulate in front of many High Arctic glaciers during the winter months, as water escapes from englacial or subglacial storage. Such icings have been interpreted as evidence for warm-based subglacial conditions, but several are now known to occur in front of coldbased glaciers. In this study, we investigate the drainage system of Tellbreen, a 3.5 km long glacier in central Spitsbergen, where a large proglacial icing develops each winter, to determine the location and geometry of s… Show more

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Cited by 72 publications
(89 citation statements)
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“…A long-term mass balance of -0.6 AE 0.2 m w.e. a -1 has been calculated over this period (Baelum and Benn, 2011), similar to the average calculated for all Svalbard glaciers (-0.55 m a -1 ; Dowdeswell and others, 1997). Baelum and Benn (2011) found no evidence to suggest Tellbreen had ever undergone surge behaviour.…”
Section: Study Site and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 67%
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“…A long-term mass balance of -0.6 AE 0.2 m w.e. a -1 has been calculated over this period (Baelum and Benn, 2011), similar to the average calculated for all Svalbard glaciers (-0.55 m a -1 ; Dowdeswell and others, 1997). Baelum and Benn (2011) found no evidence to suggest Tellbreen had ever undergone surge behaviour.…”
Section: Study Site and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 67%
“…Local bedrock comprises sandstones, siltstones and shales of the Van Mijenfjorden and Adventdalen Groups (Dallmann and others, 2002). Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) data indicate that Tellbreen is currently almost entirely coldbased, with possibly only a small isolated area of warm ice below the thickest ($100 m) part of the glacier (Baelum and Benn, 2011). It was suggested by Baelum and Benn (2011) that warm-based ice may have been more extensive at the LIA maximum extent of the glacier, but, based on the minimal evidence for valley erosion or modification, was unlikely to have been widespread or prolonged.…”
Section: Study Site and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…For the conversion of travel time of the GPR signal to ice thickness, a mean velocity of 0.168 m ns -1 of electromagnetic waves in glacier ice was applied. The value was considered appropriate for a polythermal glacier based on Bogorodsky et al (1985), Baelum and Benn (2011), Pettersson and Holmlund (2003), Cuffey and Paterson (2010), Friedt et al (2013), and Ai et al (2014). The software ReflexW (version 7.1.4) was used for post-processing the GPR profiles and identifying the bedrock.…”
Section: Ice Thickness Distribution and Ice Volumementioning
confidence: 99%