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Featured researches published by L. C. Andrews.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Caterpillar‐like ice motion in the ablation zone of the Greenland ice sheet

C. Ryser; Martin P. Lüthi; L. C. Andrews; Ginny A. Catania; Martin Funk; Robert L. Hawley; Matthew J. Hoffman; Thomas Neumann

Current understanding of ice dynamics predicts that increasing availability and variability of meltwater will have an impact on basal motion and therefore on the evolution and future behavior of the Greenland ice sheet. We present measurements of ice deformation, subglacial water pressure, and surface velocity that show periodic and episodic variations on several time scales (seasonal, multiday, and diurnal). These variations, observed with GPS and sensors at different depths throughout the ice column, are not synchronous but show delayed responses of ice deformation with increasing depth and basal water pressure in antiphase with surface velocity. With the help of a Full-Stokes ice flow model, these observations are explained as ice motion in a caterpillar-like fashion. Caused by patches of different basal slipperiness, horizontal stress transfer through the stiff central part of the ice body leads to spatially varying surface velocities and ice deformation patterns. Variation of this basal slipperiness induces characteristic patterns of ice deformation variability that explain the observed behavior. Ice flow in the ablation zone of the Greenland ice sheet is therefore controlled by activation of basal patches by varying slipperiness in the course of a melt season, leading to caterpillar-like ice motion superposed on the classical shear deformation.


Nature Communications | 2016

Greenland subglacial drainage evolution regulated by weakly connected regions of the bed

Matthew J. Hoffman; L. C. Andrews; Stephen F. Price; Ginny A. Catania; Thomas Neumann; Martin P. Lüthi; Jason Gulley; C. Ryser; Robert L. Hawley; Blaine Morriss

Penetration of surface meltwater to the bed of the Greenland Ice Sheet each summer causes an initial increase in ice speed due to elevated basal water pressure, followed by slowdown in late summer that continues into fall and winter. While this seasonal pattern is commonly explained by an evolution of the subglacial drainage system from an inefficient distributed to efficient channelized configuration, mounting evidence indicates that subglacial channels are unable to explain important aspects of hydrodynamic coupling in late summer and fall. Here we use numerical models of subglacial drainage and ice flow to show that limited, gradual leakage of water and lowering of water pressure in weakly connected regions of the bed can explain the dominant features in late and post melt season ice dynamics. These results suggest that a third weakly connected drainage component should be included in the conceptual model of subglacial hydrology.


Nature Communications | 2017

Corrigendum: Greenland subglacial drainage evolution regulated by weakly connected regions of the bed

Matthew J. Hoffman; L. C. Andrews; Stephen F. Price; Ginny A. Catania; Thomas Neumann; Martin P. Lüthi; Jason Gulley; C. Ryser; Robert L. Hawley; Blaine Morriss

Nature Communications 7: Article number: 13903 (2016); Published 19 December 2016; Updated 7 February 2017 The original version of this Article contained a typographical error in the spelling of the author Stephen F. Price, which was incorrectly given as Stephen A. Price. This has now been correctedin both the PDF and HTML versions of the Article.


Nature | 2014

Direct observations of evolving subglacial drainage beneath the Greenland Ice Sheet

L. C. Andrews; Ginny A. Catania; Matthew J. Hoffman; Jason Gulley; Martin P. Lüthi; C. Ryser; Robert L. Hawley; Thomas Neumann


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Links Between Acceleration, Melting, and Supraglacial Lake Drainage of the Western Greenland Ice Sheet

Matthew J. Hoffman; Ginny A. Catania; Thomas Neumann; L. C. Andrews; J. A. Rumrill


The Cryosphere | 2015

Heat sources within the Greenland Ice Sheet: dissipation, temperate paleo-firn and cryo-hydrologic warming

Martin P. Lüthi; C. Ryser; L. C. Andrews; Ginny A. Catania; Martin Funk; Robert L. Hawley; Matthew J. Hoffman; Thomas Neumann


Journal of Glaciology | 2014

Sustained seismic tremors and icequakes detected in the ablation zone of the Greenland ice sheet

Claudia Röösli; Fabian Walter; Stephan Husen; L. C. Andrews; Martin P. Lüthi; Ginny A. Catania; Edi Kissling


Journal of Glaciology | 2014

Sustained High Basal Motion of the Greenland Ice Sheet Revealed by Borehole Deformation

C. Ryser; Martin P. Lüthi; L. C. Andrews; Hoffman, Matthew, J.; Ginny A. Catania; Robert L. Hawley; Thomas Neumann; Steen Savstrup Kristensen


The Cryosphere | 2013

A ten-year record of supraglacial lake evolution and rapid drainage in West Greenland using an automated processing algorithm for multispectral imagery

Blaine Morriss; Robert L. Hawley; Jonathan W. Chipman; L. C. Andrews; Ginny A. Catania; Matthew J. Hoffman; Martin P. Lüthi; Thomas Neumann


The Cryosphere Discussions | 2014

Excess heat in the Greenland Ice Sheet: dissipation, temperate paleo-firn and cryo-hydrologic warming

Martin P. Lüthi; C. Ryser; L. C. Andrews; Ginny A. Catania; Martin Funk; Robert L. Hawley; Matthew J. Hoffman; Thomas Neumann

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Ginny A. Catania

University of Texas at Austin

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Thomas Neumann

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Matthew J. Hoffman

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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