Abstract

AbstractData from the Filchner V Campaign were used to investigate the mass-balance conditions in the southeastern Ronne Ice Shelf (RIS), Antarctica. Radio-echo sounding and seismic measurements over this area show a maximum ice thickness of >2000 m close to the grounding line of Foundation Ice Stream. The measurements also revealed that the position of this grounding line is 40 km further south than previously thought. New mass-flux calculations result in an estimate of 51 km3 a−1 for the ice-stream transport from the ice sheet into the eastern ice shelf. The Mollereisstrom (MES), west of Foundation Ice Stream, shows a maximum ice thickness of 1100-1200 m in the grounding-line area and a mass flux of 23 km3 a−1.Assuming steady-state conditions, mass-balance calculations based on the new data result in a mean melt rate of about 1 ma−1 at the ice-shelf base for the entire southeastern part of the RIS. The melt rate in the grounding-line area of Foundation Ice Stream exceeds 9 m a−1. In contrast, other ice streams draining into the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf show maximum melt rates from 1-2 ma-1. (MES) to 4 ma−1 (Rutford Ice Stream). Our calculations indicate that nearly all of the ice deposited in the drainage area of the eastern RIS on the ice sheet does not reach the ice-shelf front as original meteoric ice, but is melted at the ice-shelf base.

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