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Featured researches published by A Treverrow.


Journal of Glaciology | 2005

Borehole imagery of meteoric and marine ice layers in the Amery Ice Shelf, East Antarctica

Mike Craven; Frank Carsey; Alberto Behar; Jaret Matthews; Russell Brand; Alan Elcheikh; Seane Hall; A Treverrow

A real-time video camera probe was deployed in a hot-water drilled borehole through the Amery Ice Shelf, East Antarctica, where a total ice thickness of 480 m included at least 200 m of basal marine ice. Down-looking and side-looking digital video footage showed a striking transition from white bubbly meteoric ice above to dark marine ice below, but the transition was neither microscopically sharp nor flat, indicating the uneven nature (at centimetre scale) of the ice-shelf base upstream where the marine ice first started to accrete. Marine ice features were imaged including platelet structures, cell inclusions, entrained particles, and the interface with sea water at the base. The cells are assumed to be entrained sea water, and were present throughout the lower 100-150m of the marine ice column, becoming larger and more prevalent as the lower surface was approached until, near the base, they became channels large enough that the camera field of view could not contain them. Platelets in the marine ice at depth appeared to be as large as 1-2 cm in diameter. Particles were visible in the borehole meltwater; probably marine and mineral particles liberated by the drill, but their distribution varied with depth.


Journal of Glaciology | 2010

Meteoric and marine ice crystal orientation fabrics from the Amery Ice Shelf, East Antarctica

A Treverrow; Roland C. Warner; William F. Budd; Mike Craven

The northwestern sector of the Amery Ice Shelf, East Antarctica, has a layered structure, due to the presence of both meteoric ice and a marine ice layer resulting from sub-shelf freezing processes. Crystal orientation fabric and grain-size data are presented for ice cores obtained from two boreholes � 70 km apart on approximately the same flowline. Multiple-maxima crystal orientation fabrics and large mean grain sizes in the meteoric ice are indicative of stress relaxation and subsequent grain growth in ice that has flowed into the Amery Ice Shelf. Strongly anisotropic single-maximum crystal orientation fabrics and rectangular textures near the base of the � 200 m thick marine ice layer suggest accretion occurs by the accumulation of frazil ice platelets. Crystal orientation fabrics in older marine ice exhibit vertical large circle girdle patterns, influenced by the complex stress configurations that exist towards the margins of the ice shelf. Post-accumulation grain growth and fabric development in the marine ice layer are restricted by a high concentration of brine and insoluble particulate inclusions. Differences in the meteoric and marine ice crystallography are indicative of the contrasting rheological properties of these layers, which must be considered in relation to large-scale ice-shelf dynamics.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Large flux of iron from the Amery Ice Shelf marine ice to Prydz Bay, East Antarctica

L. Herraiz-Borreguero; Delphine Lannuzel; P. van der Merwe; A Treverrow; J. B. Pedro

The Antarctic continental shelf supports a high level of marine primary productivity and is a globally important carbon dioxide (CO2) sink through the photosynthetic fixation of CO2 via the biological pump. Sustaining such high productivity requires a large supply of the essential micronutrient iron (Fe); however, the pathways for Fe delivery to these zones vary spatially and temporally. Our study is the first to report a previously unquantified source of concentrated bioavailable Fe to Antarctic surface waters. We hypothesize that Fe derived from subglacial processes is delivered to euphotic waters through the accretion (Fe storage) and subsequent melting (Fe release) of a marine-accreted layer of ice at the base of the Amery Ice Shelf (AIS). Using satellite-derived Chlorophyll-a data, we show that the soluble Fe supplied by the melting of the marine ice layer is an order of magnitude larger than the required Fe necessary to sustain the large annual phytoplankton bloom in Prydz Bay. Our finding of high concentrations of Fe in AIS marine ice and recent data on increasing rates of ice shelf basal melt in many of Antarcticas ice shelves should encourage further research into glacial and marine sediment transport beneath ice shelves and their sensitivity to current changes in basal melt. Currently, the distribution, volume, and Fe concentration of Antarctic marine ice is poorly constrained. This uncertainty, combined with variable forecasts of increased rates of ice shelf basal melt, limits our ability to predict future Fe supply to Antarctic coastal waters.


Journal of Glaciology | 2012

The tertiary creep of polycrystalline ice: experimental evidence for stress-dependent levels of strain-rate enhancement

A Treverrow; William F. Budd; Tim H. Jacka; Roland C. Warner


Climate of The Past | 2015

A 2000-year annual record of snow accumulation rates for Law Dome, East Antarctica

Jl Roberts; Ct Plummer; Tr Vance; Td van Ommen; Andrew D. Moy; Samuel Poynter; A Treverrow; Maj Curran; Steve George


Journal of Glaciology | 2013

Ice flow relations for stress and strain-rate components from combined shear and compression laboratory experiments

William F. Budd; Roland C. Warner; Tim H. Jacka; A Treverrow


Journal of Glaciology | 2015

Modelled stress distributions at the Dome Summit South borehole, Law Dome, East Antarctica: a comparison of anisotropic ice flow relations

A Treverrow; Roland C. Warner; William F. Budd; Tim H. Jacka; Jl Roberts


The Cryosphere | 2018

Implementing an empirical scalar constitutive relation for ice with flow-induced polycrystalline anisotropy in large-scale ice sheet models

F Graham; Mathieu Morlighem; Roland C. Warner; A Treverrow


Journal of Glaciology | 2016

Drivers of ASCAT C band backscatter variability in the dry snow zone of Antarctica

Alexander D. Fraser; Melissa A. Nigro; Stefan R. M. Ligtenberg; B Legresy; Mana Inoue; John J. Cassano; Peter Kuipers Munneke; Jan T. M. Lenaerts; Nw Young; A Treverrow; Michiel R. van den Broeke; Hiroyuki Enomoto


Earth System Science Data | 2016

Ice crystal c-axis orientation and mean grain size measurements from the Dome Summit South ice core, Law Dome, East Antarctica

A Treverrow; Li Jun; Tim H. Jacka

Collaboration


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Roland C. Warner

Cooperative Research Centre

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Jl Roberts

Australian Antarctic Division

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Mike Craven

Cooperative Research Centre

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Tim H. Jacka

Australian Antarctic Division

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F Graham

University of Tasmania

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B Galton-Fenzi

Australian Antarctic Division

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J. B. Pedro

University of Copenhagen

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Andrew D. Moy

Australian Antarctic Division

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