Kathryn C. Rose
University of Bristol
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Kathryn C. Rose.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015
Robert G. Bingham; David M. Rippin; Nanna B. Karlsson; Hugh F. J. Corr; Fausto Ferraccioli; Tom A. Jordan; Anne Le Brocq; Kathryn C. Rose; Neil Ross; Martin J. Siegert
Recent studies have aroused concerns over the potential for ice draining the Weddell Sea sector of West Antarctica to figure more prominently in sea-level contributions should buttressing from the Filchner-Ronne Ice Shelf diminish. To improve understanding of how ice-stream dynamics there evolved through the Holocene, we interrogate Radio-Echo Sounding (RES) data from across the catchments of Institute and Moller Ice Streams (IIS and MIS), focusing especially on the use of internal layering to investigate ice-flow change. As an important component of this work, we investigate the influence that the orientation of the RES acquisition-track with respect to ice flow exerts on internal layering, and find that this influence is minimal unless a RES flight track parallels ice flow. We also investigate potential changes to internal layering characteristics with depth to search for important temporal transitions in ice-flow regime. Our findings suggest that ice in northern IIS, draining the Ellsworth Subglacial Highlands, has retained its present ice-flow configuration throughout the Holocene. This contrasts with less topographically-constrained ice in southern IIS and much of MIS, whose internal layering evinces spatial changes to the configuration of ice flow over the past ~10,000 years. Our findings confirm Siegert et al.’s (2013) inference that fast flow was diverted from Bungenstock Ice Rise during the Late Holocene, and suggest that this may have represented just one component of wider regional changes to ice flow occurring across the IIS and MIS catchments as the West Antarctic Ice Sheet has thinned since the Last Glacial Maximum.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2014
Timothy T. Creyts; Fausto Ferraccioli; Robin E. Bell; Michael Wolovick; Hugh F. J. Corr; Kathryn C. Rose; Nicholas Frearson; Detlef Damaske; Tom A. Jordan; David A. Braaten; Carol A. Finn
Once an ice sheet grows beyond a critical thickness, the basal thermal regime favors melting and development of subglacial water networks. Subglacial water is necessary for bedrock erosion, but the exact mechanisms that lead to preservation of subglacial topography are unclear. Here we resolve the freezing mechanisms that lead to long-term, high-altitude preservation across the Gamburtsev Subglacial Mountains in East Antarctica. Analyses of a comprehensive geophysical data set reveal a large-scale water network along valley floors. The ice sheet often drives subglacial water up steep topography where it freezes along high ridges beneath thinner ice. Statistical tests of hypsometry show the Gamburtsevs resemble younger midlatitude mountains, indicating exceptional preservation. We conclude that the Gamburtsevs have been shielded from erosion since the latest Eocene (∼34 Ma). These freezing mechanisms likely account for the spatial and temporal patterns of erosion and preservation seen in other glaciated mountain ranges.
Geology | 2014
Kathryn C. Rose; Neil Ross; Robert G. Bingham; Hugh F. J. Corr; Fausto Ferraccioli; Tom A. Jordan; Anne Le Brocq; David M. Rippin; Martin J. Siegert
Several recent studies predict that the West Antarctic Ice Sheet will become increasingly unstable under warmer conditions. Insights on such change can be assisted through investigations of the subglacial landscape, which contains imprints of former ice-sheet behavior. Here, we present radio-echo sounding data and satellite imagery revealing a series of ancient large sub-parallel subglacial bed channels preserved in the region between the Moller and Foundation Ice Streams, West Antarctica. We suggest that these newly recognized channels were formed by significant meltwater routed along the icesheet bed. The volume of water required is likely substantial and can most easily be explained by water generated at the ice surface. The Greenland Ice Sheet today exemplifies how significant seasonal surface melt can be transferred to the bed via englacial routing. For West Antarctica, the Pliocene (2.6–5.3 Ma) represents the most recent sustained period when temperatures could have been high enough to generate surface melt comparable to that of present-day Greenland. We propose, therefore, that a temperate ice sheet covered this location during Pliocene warm periods.
Journal of Glaciology | 2006
Jane K. Hart; Kirk Martinez; Royan Ong; Alistair Riddoch; Kathryn C. Rose; Paritosh Padhy
Geomorphology | 2014
David M. Rippin; Robert G. Bingham; Tom A. Jordan; Andrew P. Wright; Neil Ross; Hugh F. J. Corr; Fausto Ferraccioli; A. M. Le Brocq; Kathryn C. Rose; Martin J. Siegert
Earth Surface Dynamics Discussions | 2014
Kathryn C. Rose; Neil Ross; Tom A. Jordan; Robert G. Bingham; Hugh F. J. Corr; Fausto Ferraccioli; A. M. Le Brocq; David M. Rippin; Martin J. Siegert
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2015
Jane K. Hart; Kathryn C. Rose; Alexander I. Clayton; Kirk Martinez
Archive | 2006
Michael Studinger; Robin Elizabeth Bell; Fausto Ferraccioli; Detlef Damaske; Carol Finn; David A. Braaten; Mark Fahnestock; Theresa Anne Jordan; Hugh F. J. Corr; S. Elieff; Catherine Robinson; Nicholas Frearson; D. Geue; M. C. McMinn; Benjamin A. Burton; F. Goldmann; Arthur Block; Madeleine Bates; Kathryn C. Rose
Archive | 2009
Fausto Ferraccioli; Robin Elizabeth Bell; Michael Studinger; Detlef Damaske; Theresa Anne Jordan; Hugh F. J. Corr; David A. Braaten; Prasad Gogineni; Mark A. Fahnestock; Carol Finn; Kathryn C. Rose
Archive | 2009
Carol Finn; Detlef Damaske; Fausto Ferraccioli; Michael Studinger; Theresa Anne Jordan; Kathryn C. Rose; Arthur Block; Nicholas Frearson; Robin Elizabeth Bell; Alexander Golynsky