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Featured researches published by J. A. Griggs.


Nature | 2013

Calving fluxes and basal melt rates of Antarctic ice shelves.

Mathieu A Depoorter; Jonathan L. Bamber; J. A. Griggs; Jtm Lenaerts; Srm Ligtenberg; M. R. van den Broeke; Geir Moholdt

Iceberg calving has been assumed to be the dominant cause of mass loss for the Antarctic ice sheet, with previous estimates of the calving flux exceeding 2,000 gigatonnes per year. More recently, the importance of melting by the ocean has been demonstrated close to the grounding line and near the calving front. So far, however, no study has reliably quantified the calving flux and the basal mass balance (the balance between accretion and ablation at the ice-shelf base) for the whole of Antarctica. The distribution of fresh water in the Southern Ocean and its partitioning between the liquid and solid phases is therefore poorly constrained. Here we estimate the mass balance components for all ice shelves in Antarctica, using satellite measurements of calving flux and grounding-line flux, modelled ice-shelf snow accumulation rates and a regional scaling that accounts for unsurveyed areas. We obtain a total calving flux of 1,321 ± 144 gigatonnes per year and a total basal mass balance of −1,454 ± 174 gigatonnes per year. This means that about half of the ice-sheet surface mass gain is lost through oceanic erosion before reaching the ice front, and the calving flux is about 34 per cent less than previous estimates derived from iceberg tracking. In addition, the fraction of mass loss due to basal processes varies from about 10 to 90 per cent between ice shelves. We find a significant positive correlation between basal mass loss and surface elevation change for ice shelves experiencing surface lowering and enhanced discharge. We suggest that basal mass loss is a valuable metric for predicting future ice-shelf vulnerability to oceanic forcing.


Journal of Glaciology | 2011

Antarctic ice-shelf thickness from satellite radar altimetry

J. A. Griggs; Jonathan L. Bamber

Ice-shelf thickness is an important boundary condition for ice-sheet and sub-ice-shelf cavity modelling. It is required near the grounding line to calculate the ice flux used to determine ice-sheet mass balance by comparison with the upstream accumulation. In this mass budget approach, the accuracy of the ice thickness is one of the limiting factors in the calculation. We present a satellite retrieval of the ice thickness for all Antarctic ice shelves using satellite radar altimeter data from the geodetic phases of the European Remote-sensing Satellite (ERS-1) during 1994-95 supplemented by ICESat data for regions south of the ERS-1 latitudinal limit. Surface elevations derived from these instruments are interpolated on to regular grids using kriging, and converted to ice thicknesses using a modelled firn-density correction. The availability of a new spatial variable firn-density correction significantly reduces the error in ice thickness as this was previously the dominant error source. Comparison to airborne data shows good agreement, particularly when compared to SOAR CASERTZ data on the largest ice shelves. Biases range from -13.0 m for areas where the assumption of hydrostatic equilibrium breaks down, to 53.4 m in regions where marine ice may be present.


Science | 2013

Paleofluvial Mega-Canyon Beneath the Central Greenland Ice Sheet

Jonathan L. Bamber; Martin J. Siegert; J. A. Griggs; Shawn J. Marshall; Giorgio Spada

Ice Lubricant The Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets both possess hydrological systems that allow water accumulating from the melting of surface ice to be transported to the base of the ice sheet. If that water, when it reaches the ice-bedrock interface, is distributed over large areas, it will lubricate rapid ice sheet flow toward the sea. Bamber et al. (p. 997) report the existence of a large, 750-km-long subglacial canyon in northern Greenland, which may act as a channel for the transport of basal meltwater to the margin of the ice sheet and thus influence overall ice sheet dynamics. A large subglacial canyon extends for more than 750 kilometers from central Greenland to its northern margin. Subglacial topography plays an important role in modulating the distribution and flow of basal water. Where topography predates ice sheet inception, it can also reveal insights into former tectonic and geomorphological processes. Although such associations are known in Antarctica, little consideration has been given to them in Greenland, partly because much of the ice sheet bed is thought to be relatively flat and smooth. Here, we present evidence from ice-penetrating radar data for a 750-km-long subglacial canyon in northern Greenland that is likely to have influenced basal water flow from the ice sheet interior to the margin. We suggest that the mega-canyon predates ice sheet inception and will have influenced basal hydrology in Greenland over past glacial cycles.


Journal of Climate | 2008

Assessment of Cloud Cover Characteristics in Satellite Datasets and Reanalysis Products for Greenland

J. A. Griggs; Jonathan L. Bamber

Abstract Clouds have an important controlling influence on the radiation balance, and hence surface melting, over the Greenland ice sheet and need to be classified to derive reliable albedo estimates from visible imagery. Little is known, however, about the true cloud cover characteristics for the largest island on Earth, Greenland. Here, an attempt is made to address this knowledge gap by examining cloud characteristics, as determined by three complementary satellites sensors: the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR), the Along Track Scanning Radiometer-2 (ATSR-2), and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). The first provides a multidecadal time series of clouds, albedo, and surface temperature, and is available, in the form of the extended AVHRR Polar Pathfinder dataset (APP-x), as a homogeneous, consistent dataset from 1982 until 2004. APP-x data, however, are also the most challenging to cloud classify over snow-covered terrain, due to the limited spectral capabilities ...


The Cryosphere | 2012

Bedmap2: improved ice bed, surface and thickness datasets for Antarctica

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


The Cryosphere | 2012

A new bed elevation dataset for Greenland

Jonathan L. Bamber; J. A. Griggs; R. T. W. L. Hurkmans; Julian A. Dowdeswell; Sivaprasad Gogineni; Ian M. Howat; J. Mouginot; John Paden; S. Palmer; Eric Rignot; Daniel Steinhage


The Cryosphere | 2008

A new 1 km digital elevation model of the Antarctic derived from combined satellite radar and laser data – Part 1: Data and methods

Jonathan L. Bamber; Jl Gomez-Dans; J. A. Griggs


Nature Geoscience | 2013

Evidence from ice shelves for channelized meltwater flow beneath the Antarctic Ice Sheet

Anne Le Brocq; Neil Ross; J. A. Griggs; Robert G. Bingham; Hugh F. J. Corr; Fausto Ferraccioli; Adrian Jenkins; Tom A. Jordan; Antony J. Payne; David M. Rippin; Martin J. Siegert


The Cryosphere | 2008

A new 1 km digital elevation model of Antarctica derived from combined radar and laser data – Part 2: Validation and error estimates

J. A. Griggs; Jonathan L. Bamber


The Cryosphere | 2012

Brief communication "Importance of slope-induced error correction in volume change estimates from radar altimetry"

R. T. W. L. Hurkmans; Jonathan L. Bamber; J. A. Griggs

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Jan T. M. Lenaerts

University of Colorado Boulder

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Geir Moholdt

Scripps Institution of Oceanography

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Adrian Jenkins

British Antarctic Survey

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