Abstract

Aero-measurements during the 1983–84 and 1985–86 field seasons showed that the ice in the central part of Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf is more than 250 m thicker than has been assumed previously. In the margin area a double layering of the ice was found, with disappearing bottom reflections farther inland. High absorption of approximately 0.3 dB/m in the lower layer and a decreasing reflectivity at the ice / sea-water interface, probably caused by bottom freezing, have been estimated. Aero-measurements were used to map the surface elevation of the ice, with an accuracy of approximately 3 m. From the plot of ice thickness against surface elevation it was possible to obtain a calibration curve for isostatic conditions. Large deviations from this plot with an ice thickness which is apparently too small (they seem to be isostatic anomalies) were found in the central part of the ice shelf. The true ice thickness could easily be calculated and mapped from these anomalies and the electromagnetically measured thickness. From the map based on flights made in 1983–84 the site for a bore hole was chosen in the central part of the ice shelf with an estimated ice thickness of about 450 m, instead of the less than 200 m deduced by an electromagnetic reflection (EMR) method. Hot-water drilling by the ground party of our group (H. Engelhardt and J. Determann) revealed an ice thickness of 465 m at this site.

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