Abstract

Following international recommendations (UNESCO / IASH 1969), the decision was made to determine the surface profile of a number of glaciers in Palmer Land and Alexander Island. By comparison with the ice sheet elsewhere on the continent, the chosen glaciers were small and hence more sensitive to the effect of climate over the last few decades. Six profiles were established between 1972 and 1976 and they were re-levelled in the 1985-86 summer. The profiles are between 0.5 and 4.5 km long and are terminated, at one end at least, by a bench mark established on rock. The profiles were re-measured close to the calendar date of the original survey so that recent trends would not be masked by the annual cycle of accumulation, densification and ablation. Five of the six profiles show that the ice sheet has thickened in the last 10-15 years, albeit at a slow rate. Changes in four profiles on Alexander Island within 300 m of sea-level range from a thickening of 66 mm a−1 to a thinning of 83 mm a−1; on average the sites show a thickening of just 6 mm a year. This is similar to the thickening rate of 5 mm a−1 which was found for a cold site on the spine of the Antarctic Peninsula at 1600 m above sea-level. The greatest change was found at an intermediate elevation (500 m). In a snow-field between two parallel mountain groups in the Batterbee Mountains of Palmer Land, thickening averaged 165 mm a−1. To put these values into perspective, in the absence of glacier flow and summer melting, the glaciers would thicken by up to about 500 mm each year as a result of the accumulation of snow. Except in the Batterbee Mountains, we find that glacier flow is in close balance with present climate, despite the general warming trend that has occurred in the Antarctic Peninsula region over the past 30 years.

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