We investigate the iceberg-calving cycle of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS), East Antarctica, using evidence acquired between 1936 and 2000. The most recent major iceberg-calving event occurred between late 1963 and early 1964, when a large berg totalling about 10000 km2 in area broke from the ice front. The rate of forward advance of the ice front is presently 1300-1400 m a-1. At this rate of advance, based on the present ice front position from recent RADARSAT imagery, it would take 20-25 years to attain the 1963 (pre-calve) position, suggesting that the AIS calving cycle has a period of approximately 60-70 years. Two longitudinal (parallel-to-flow) rifts, approximately 25 km apart at the AIS front, are observed in satellite imagery acquired ov...
The Ross Ice Shelf, the largest in Antarctica, is a huge sheet of glacial ice and snow extending fro...
An object-based method for automatic iceberg detection has been applied to Advanced Synthetic Apertu...
The Mertz Glacier Tongue (MGT) in East Antarctica lost ~55% of its floating length in February 2010,...
We investigate the iceberg-calving cycle of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS), East Antarctica, using eviden...
On 26 September 2019, a massive iceberg broke off the west side of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS) in East...
Iceberg calving is the main process that facilitates the dynamic mass loss of ice sheets into the oc...
The calving of icebergs from Antarctic ice shelves is one of the primary ways in which mass is trans...
In October 1998 and in May 2000 two major calving events took place at the ice front of the Filchner...
ABSTRACTOn 2 March 2016, several small en échelon tabular icebergs calved from the seaward front of ...
Iceberg calving accounts for two thirds of the mass discharged from the cryosphere to the ocean. Des...
The collapse of several ice shelves in the Antarctic Peninsula since the late twentieth century has ...
Iceberg calving is the detachment of ice from ice shelves or glaciers. Although calving is a natural...
Iceberg calving is the largest loss term in Antarctic mass balance. The iceberg areas vary from a fe...
Despite the potentially detrimental impact of large-scale calving events on the geometry and ice flo...
Fifteen synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images of the Ronne Ice Shelf (also referred to as the Filchn...
The Ross Ice Shelf, the largest in Antarctica, is a huge sheet of glacial ice and snow extending fro...
An object-based method for automatic iceberg detection has been applied to Advanced Synthetic Apertu...
The Mertz Glacier Tongue (MGT) in East Antarctica lost ~55% of its floating length in February 2010,...
We investigate the iceberg-calving cycle of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS), East Antarctica, using eviden...
On 26 September 2019, a massive iceberg broke off the west side of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS) in East...
Iceberg calving is the main process that facilitates the dynamic mass loss of ice sheets into the oc...
The calving of icebergs from Antarctic ice shelves is one of the primary ways in which mass is trans...
In October 1998 and in May 2000 two major calving events took place at the ice front of the Filchner...
ABSTRACTOn 2 March 2016, several small en échelon tabular icebergs calved from the seaward front of ...
Iceberg calving accounts for two thirds of the mass discharged from the cryosphere to the ocean. Des...
The collapse of several ice shelves in the Antarctic Peninsula since the late twentieth century has ...
Iceberg calving is the detachment of ice from ice shelves or glaciers. Although calving is a natural...
Iceberg calving is the largest loss term in Antarctic mass balance. The iceberg areas vary from a fe...
Despite the potentially detrimental impact of large-scale calving events on the geometry and ice flo...
Fifteen synthetic aperture radar (SAR) images of the Ronne Ice Shelf (also referred to as the Filchn...
The Ross Ice Shelf, the largest in Antarctica, is a huge sheet of glacial ice and snow extending fro...
An object-based method for automatic iceberg detection has been applied to Advanced Synthetic Apertu...
The Mertz Glacier Tongue (MGT) in East Antarctica lost ~55% of its floating length in February 2010,...