Abstract

Abstract We present a quantitative ground-penetrating radar (GPR) analysis of the Lower Calderone Glacieret to highlight the recent evolution of one of the southernmost glacial systems in Europe. The Upper and Lower Calderone Glacierets are the last two perennial ice bodies in the Apennine Mountains (Italy), and their continuous monitoring is important for glaciology, hydrology and climate science. We applied a proprietary auto-picking algorithm to track reflections accurately and objectively within three pseudo-3-D GPR data sets that were acquired over the Lower Glacieret in different years. After the time-to-depth conversion, the basal reflections were projected onto the normal versors of a 3-D topographic model of the survey area, at the different GPR trace positions. We then applied an Adjusted Inverse-Distance Weighted Spatial Interpolation method to extrapolate the ice-bedrock interface within the areas not directly covered by the GPR profiles and compare it with the topographic surface to recover the glacieret volume. In this paper, we critically examine the accuracy of the reconstructed models, including possible issues related to the challenging survey areas, such as local artifacts in the interpolated interface caused by irregular GPR coverage. We further discuss the various advantages of the implemented procedure with respect to more traditional glacier monitoring techniques.

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