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Featured researches published by Hannes Konrad.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Uneven onset and pace of ice-dynamical imbalance in the Amundsen Sea Embayment, West Antarctica

Hannes Konrad; Lin Gilbert; Stephen L. Cornford; Antony J. Payne; Anna E. Hogg; Alan Muir; Andrew Shepherd

We combine measurements acquired by five satellite altimeter missions to obtain an uninterrupted record of ice sheet elevation change over the Amundsen Sea Embayment, West Antarctica, since 1992. Using these data, we examine the onset of surface lowering arising through ice-dynamical imbalance, and the pace at which it has propagated inland, by tracking elevation changes along glacier flow lines. Surface lowering has spread slowest (<6 km/yr) along the Pope, Smith, and Kohler (PSK) Glaciers, due to their small extent. Pine Island Glacier (PIG) is characterized by a continuous inland spreading of surface lowering, notably fast at rates of 13 to 15 km/yr along tributaries draining the southeastern lobe, possibly due to basal conditions or tributary geometry. Surface lowering on Thwaites Glacier (THG) has been episodic and has spread inland fastest (10 to 12 km/yr) along its central flow lines. The current episodes of surface lowering started approximately 10 years before the first measurements on PSK, around 1990 on PIG, and around 2000 on THG. Ice-dynamical imbalance across the sector has therefore been uneven during the satellite record.


Surveys in Geophysics | 2014

The Deformational Response of a Viscoelastic Solid Earth Model Coupled to a Thermomechanical Ice Sheet Model

Hannes Konrad; Malte Thoma; Ingo Sasgen; Volker Klemann; Klaus Grosfeld; Dirk Barbi; Zdeněk Martinec

We apply a coupled thermomechanical ice sheet—self-gravitating viscoelastic solid Earth model (SGVEM), allowing for the dynamic exchange of ice thickness and bedrock deformation, in order to investigate the effect of viscoelastic deformation on ice dynamics and vice versa. In a synthetic glaciation scenario, we investigate the interaction between the ice sheet and the solid Earth deformation, the glacial-isostatic adjustment (GIA), accounting for an atmospheric forcing depending on the ice sheet surface altitude. We compare the results from the coupled model to runs with the common elastic lithosphere/relaxing asthenosphere (ELRA) model, where the lithosphere is represented by a thin plate and the mantle relaxes with one characteristic relaxation time, as well as to a rigid Earth without any deformation. We find that the deformational behaviour of the SGVEM on ice dynamics (i.e. stored ice volume, ice thickness and velocity field) is comparable to the ELRA for an optimal choice of the parameters in steady state, but exhibits differences in the transient behaviour. Beyond the ice sheet, in the region of peripheral forebulge, the differences in the transient surface deformation between ELRA and SGVEM are substantial, demonstrating the inadequacy of the ELRA model for interpreting constraints on GIA in the periphery of the ice sheet, such as sea-level indicators and GPS uplift rates.


Nature Geoscience | 2018

Net retreat of Antarctic glacier grounding lines

Hannes Konrad; Andrew Shepherd; Lin Gilbert; Anna E. Hogg; Malcolm McMillan; Alan Muir; Thomas Slater

Grounding lines are a key indicator of ice-sheet instability, because changes in their position reflect imbalance with the surrounding ocean and affect the flow of inland ice. Although the grounding lines of several Antarctic glaciers have retreated rapidly due to ocean-driven melting, records are too scarce to assess the scale of the imbalance. Here, we combine satellite altimeter observations of ice-elevation change and measurements of ice geometry to track grounding-line movement around the entire continent, tripling the coverage of previous surveys. Between 2010 and 2016, 22%, 3% and 10% of surveyed grounding lines in West Antarctica, East Antarctica and at the Antarctic Peninsula retreated at rates faster than 25 m yr−1 (the typical pace since the Last Glacial Maximum) and the continent has lost 1,463 km2 ± 791 km2 of grounded-ice area. Although by far the fastest rates of retreat occurred in the Amundsen Sea sector, we show that the Pine Island Glacier grounding line has stabilized, probably as a consequence of abated ocean forcing. On average, Antarctica’s fast-flowing ice streams retreat by 110 metres per metre of ice thinning.Grounding lines in parts of West Antarctica, East Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula retreated faster than typical post-glacial pace, according to satellite observations and ice geometry measurements.


Annals of Glaciology | 2018

Climate and surface mass balance of coastal West Antarctica resolved by regional climate modelling

Jan T. M. Lenaerts; Stefan R. M. Ligtenberg; Brooke Medley; Willem Jan van de Berg; Hannes Konrad; Julien P. Nicolas; J. Melchior van Wessem; Luke D. Trusel; Robert Mulvaney; Rebecca Tuckwell; Anna E. Hogg; Elizabeth R. Thomas

ABSTRACT West Antarctic climate and surface mass balance (SMB) records are sparse. To fill this gap, regional atmospheric climate modelling is useful, providing that such models are employed at sufficiently high horizontal resolution and coupled with a snow model. Here we present the results of a high-resolution (5.5 km) regional atmospheric climate model (RACMO2) simulation of coastal West Antarctica for the period 1979–2015. We evaluate the results with available in situ weather observations, remote-sensing estimates of surface melt, and SMB estimates derived from radar and firn cores. Moreover, results are compared with those from a lower-resolution version, to assess the added value of the resolution. The high-resolution model resolves small-scale climate variability invoked by topography, such as the relatively warm conditions over ice-shelf grounding zones, and local wind speed accelerations. Surface melt and SMB are well reproduced by RACMO2. This dataset will prove useful for picking ice core locations, converting elevation changes to mass changes, for driving ocean, ice-sheet and coupled models, and for attributing changes in the West Antarctic Ice Sheet and shelves to changes in atmospheric forcing.


The Cryosphere | 2013

Antarctic ice-mass balance 2003 to 2012: regional reanalysis of GRACE satellite gravimetry measurements with improved estimate of glacial-isostatic adjustment based on GPS uplift rates

Ingo Sasgen; Hannes Konrad; Erik R. Ivins; M. R. van den Broeke; Jonathan L. Bamber; Zdeněk Martinec; Volker Klemann


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2015

Potential of the solid-Earth response for limiting long-term West Antarctic Ice Sheet retreat in a warming climate

Hannes Konrad; Ingo Sasgen; David Pollard; Volker Klemann


Nature | 2018

Mass balance of the Antarctic Ice Sheet from 1992 to 2017

Andrew Shepherd; Erik R. Ivins; Eric Rignot; Ben Smith; Michiel R. van den Broeke; I. Velicogna; Pippa L. Whitehouse; Kate Briggs; Ian Joughin; Gerhard Krinner; Sophie Nowicki; Tony Payne; Theodore A. Scambos; Nicole Schlegel; Geruo A; Cécile Agosta; Andreas P. Ahlstrøm; Greg Babonis; Valentina Roberta Barletta; Alejandro Blazquez; Jennifer Bonin; Beata Csatho; Richard I. Cullather; Denis Felikson; Xavier Fettweis; René Forsberg; Hubert Gallée; Alex S. Gardner; Lin Gilbert; Andreas Groh


Journal of Glaciology | 2013

Determining the age distribution of Colle Gnifetti, Monte Rosa, Swiss Alps, by combining ice cores, ground-penetrating radar and a simple flow model

Hannes Konrad; Pascal Bohleber; Dietmar Wagenbach; Christian Vincent; Olaf Eisen


Earth System Science Data | 2017

Altimetry, gravimetry, GPS and viscoelastic modeling data for the joint inversion for glacial isostatic adjustment in Antarctica (ESA STSE Project REGINA)

Ingo Sasgen; Alba Martín-Español; Alexander Horvath; Volker Klemann; Elizabeth J. Petrie; Bert Wouters; Martin Horwath; Roland Pail; Jonathan L. Bamber; Peter J. Clarke; Hannes Konrad; T. J. Wilson; Mark Drinkwater


Geophysical Journal International | 2017

Joint inversion estimate of regional glacial isostatic adjustment in Antarctica considering a lateral varying Earth structure (ESA STSE Project REGINA)

Ingo Sasgen; Alba Martín-Español; Alexander Horvath; Volker Klemann; Elizabeth J. Petrie; Bert Wouters; Martin Horwath; Roland Pail; Jonathan L. Bamber; Peter J. Clarke; Hannes Konrad; Mark Drinkwater

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Ingo Sasgen

Pennsylvania State University

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Lin Gilbert

University College London

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Alan Muir

University College London

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Klaus Grosfeld

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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Malte Thoma

Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research

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