Denis Callens
Université libre de Bruxelles
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Featured researches published by Denis Callens.
Annals of Glaciology | 2012
Kenichi Matsuoka; Frank Pattyn; Denis Callens; Howard Conway
Abstract Radar power returned from the basal interface along a 42 km long profile over an ice-rise promontory and the adjacent Roi Baudouin ice shelf, Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica, is analyzed to infer spatial variations in basal reflectivity and hence the basal environment. Extracting basal reflectivity from basal returned power requires an englacial attenuation model. We estimate attenuation in two ways: (1) using a temperature-dependent model with input from thermomechanical ice-flow models; and (2) using a radar method that linearly approximates the geometrically corrected returned power with ice thickness. The two methods give different results. We argue that attenuation calculated using a modeled temperature profile is more robust than the widely used radar method, especially in locations where depth-averaged attenuation varies spatially or where the patterns of basal reflectivity correlate with the patterns of the ice thickness.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
Reinhard Drews; Kenichi Matsuoka; Carlos Martín; Denis Callens; N. Bergeot; Frank Pattyn
Ice rises situated in the ice-shelf belt around Antarctica have a spatially confined flow regime with local ice divides. Beneath the divides, ice stratigraphy often develops arches with amplitudes that record the divides horizontal residence time and surface elevation changes. To investigate the evolution of Derwael Ice Rise, Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica, we combine radar and GPS data from three consecutive surveys, with a two-dimensional, full Stokes, thermomechanically coupled, transient ice-flow model. We find that the surface mass balance (SMB) is higher on the upwind and lower on the downwind slopes. Near the crest, the SMB is anomalously low and causes arches to form in the shallow stratigraphy, observable by radar. In deeper ice, arches are consequently imprinted by both SMB and ice rheology (Raymond effect). The data show how arch amplitudes decrease as along-ridge slope increases, emphasizing that the lateral positioning of radar cross sections is important for the arch interpretation. Using the model with three rheologies (isotropic with n=3,4.5 and anisotropic with n=3), we show that Derwael Ice Rise is close to steady state but is best explained using ice anisotropy and moderate thinning. Our preferred, albeit not unique, scenario suggests that the ice divide has existed for at least 5000 years and lowered at approximately 0.03 m a−1 over the last 3400 years. Independent of the specific thinning scenario, our modeling suggests that Derwael Ice Rise has exhibited a local flow regime at least since the Mid-Holocene.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
Frank Pattyn; Kenichi Matsuoka; Denis Callens; Howard Conway; Mathieu Depoorter; David Docquier; Bryn Hubbard; Denis Samyn; Jean-Louis Tison
indicate that this reflector pattern is best fit by including basal melting of at least 15 cm a � 1 . This rate of melting is low compared with rates observed on larger ice shelves in both West and East Antarctica. Ice cores extracted from a rift system close to the ice-rise promontory show several meters of marine ice accreted beneath the shelf. These observations of low rates of basal melting, and limited distribution of accreted marine ice suggest that either Antarctic surface water may reach the ice shelf base or that circulation beneath the shelf is likely dominated by the production of high salinity shelf water rather than the incursion of circumpolar deep water, implying a weak sub-shelf circulation system here. Many of the ice shelves located along the coast of Dronning Maud Land are, like Roi Baudouin Ice Shelf, characterized by frequent ice rises and promontories. Therefore, it is highly likely that these are also of shallow bathymetry and are subject to similarly weak side-shelf basal melting and refreezing.
Annals of Glaciology | 2015
Denis Callens; Nicolas Thonnard; Jan T. M. Lenaerts; Jan Melchior van Wessem; Willem Jan van de Berg; Kenichi Matsuoka; Frank Pattyn
Abstract Mass changes of polar ice sheets have an important societal impact, because they affect global sea level. Estimating the current mass budget of ice sheets is equivalent to determining the balance between surface mass gain through precipitation and outflow across the grounding line. For the Antarctic ice sheet, grounding line outflow is governed by oceanic processes and outlet glacier dynamics. In this study, we compute the mass budget of major outlet glaciers in the eastern Dronning Maud Land sector of the Antarctic ice sheet using the input/output method. Input is given by recent surface accumulation estimates (SMB) of the whole drainage basin. The outflow at the grounding line is determined from the radar data of a recent airborne survey and satellite-based velocities using a flow model of combined plug flow and simple shear. This approach is an improvement on previous studies, as the ice thickness is measured, rather than being estimated from hydrostatic equilibrium. In line with the general thickening of the ice sheet over this sector, we estimate the regional mass balance in this area at 3.15 ± 8.23 Gt a−1 according to the most recent SMB model results.
The Cryosphere | 2012
Peter T. Fretwell; Hamish D. Pritchard; David G. Vaughan; Jonathan L. Bamber; Nicholas E. Barrand; Robin E. Bell; C. Bianchi; Robert G. Bingham; D. D. Blankenship; Gino Casassa; Ginny A. Catania; Denis Callens; Howard Conway; Alison J. Cook; Hugh F. J. Corr; Detlef Damaske; V. Damm; Fausto Ferraccioli; René Forsberg; Shuji Fujita; Y. Gim; Prasad Gogineni; J. A. Griggs; Richard C. A. Hindmarsh; Per Holmlund; J. W. Holt; Robert W. Jacobel; Adrian Jenkins; Wilfried Jokat; Tom A. Jordan
Journal of Glaciology | 2014
Jan T. M. Lenaerts; Joel Brown; Michiel R. van den Broeke; Kenichi Matsuoka; Reinhard Drews; Denis Callens; Morgane Philippe; Irina V. Gorodetskaya; E. van Meijgaard; Catharina Tijm Reijmer; Frank Pattyn; N. P. M. van Lipzig
The Cryosphere | 2013
Denis Callens; Kenichi Matsuoka; Daniel Steinhage; Ben Smith; Emmanuel Witrant; Frank Pattyn
Journal of Glaciology | 2016
Denis Callens; Reinhard Drews; Emmanuel Witrant; Morgane Philippe; Frank Pattyn
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012
Frank Pattyn; Kenichi Matsuoka; Denis Callens; Howard Conway; Mathieu Depoorter; David Docquier; Bryn Hubbard; Denis Samyn; Jean-Louis Tison
Supplement to: Callens, Denis; Thonnard, Nicolas; Lenaerts, Jan T M; van Wessem, Jan M; van de Berg, Willem Jan; Matsuoka, Kenichi; Pattyn, Frank (2015): Mass balance of the Sør Rondane glacial system, East Antarctica. Annals of Glaciology, 56(70), 63-69, https://doi.org/10.3189/2015AoG70A010 | 2015
Denis Callens; Kenichi Matsuoka; Daniel Steinhage; Frank Pattyn