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Ice physical properties, structural characteristics and stratigraphy in Hobson’s Choice Ice Island and implications for the growth history of East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf, Canadian High Arctic

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Martin O. Jeffries
Affiliation:
Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska 99775-0800, U.S.A.
Harold V. Serson
Affiliation:
977 Stellyscross Road, Brentwood Bay, British Columbia VOS 1A0, Canada
H. Roy Krouse
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4, Canada
William M. Sackinger
Affiliation:
Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska 99775-0800, U.S.A.
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Abstract

Hobson’s Choice Ice Island is a tabular iceberg that calved in 1982-83 from East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf, N.W.T., Canada. Four ice cores have been analyzed for ice-crystal size, structure and fabric, bulk density, liquid electrical conductivity, δ18O and tritium. This has enabled a complete characterization of the physical properties and the structural characteristics of the ice-shelf component of Hobson’s Choice Ice Island and the first ever study of the stratigraphy and growth history of East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. The δ18O values range from -34.6 to and indicate that all the ice is derived directly and/or indirectly from precipitation. High tritium values occur only in the lowermost 5 m of the ice shelf in a layer named stratum B. The tritium is anthropogenic and indicates bottom accretion of fresh-water ice since 1952, most likely from fresh water flowing out of Disraeli Fiord below the eastern ice shelf. Above this deepest and youngest ice layer is a 35-38 m thick, unconformable layer (stratum A) comprising three ice types: iced-firn, slush ice and lake ice. This depositional-superimposed ice represents past surface accumulation, which, according to δ18O and ice-crystal structure and size variations, occurred in three major periods, each interrupted by major ablation periods. Fresh water flowing out of Disraeli Fiord below the ice shelf during those warm intervals was the most likely agent responsible for the ablation and eventual complete loss of the original sea-ice platform on which stratum A initially accumulated. The three sub-strata of stratum A vary in thickness from core to core and suggest that there has been an inversion of relief during each ablation period. The different properties and occurrences of the three superimposed ice types are due primarily to past topographic variability.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Glaciological Society 1991

I. Introduction

Ice shelves are floating ice masses of considerable horizontal extent attached to the coast. They are substantially thick, generally showing

, have level or gently undulating surfaces and rise and fall with the tide, except where they are grounded on the sea floor. The only ice shelves in North America, and probably the most extensive ice shelves in the entire north polar region, are those located along the northern coast of Ellesmere Island in the Canadian High Arctic adjacent to the Arctic Ocean (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1. Map of Ward Hunt Ice Shelf and the location and extent of the ice-island calving that occurred in 1982-83. The approximate ice-shelf location of the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island ice cores is marked.

The origin and subsequent growth of the Ellesmere Island ice shelves can be divided into primary and secondary mechanisms. The primary mechanisms are: the seaward extension of grounded glaciers to form glacier tongues; and, the growth of thick sea ice, which remains landfast for many years (Reference Koenig, Grcenaway, Dunbar and Hattersley-SmithKoenig and others, 1952; Reference JeffriesJeffries, 1987). Reference Lemmen, Evans and EnglandLemmen and others (1988a) have proposed the genetic terms "glacial shelf ice" and "sea-ice ice shelf" respectively for ice shelves originating by these mechanisms. Since one part of an ice shelf may have originated as glacial ice and another part as sea ice, the term "composite ice shelf may be appropriate in some circumstances (Reference Lemmen, Evans and EnglandLemmen and others, 1988b). The secondary mechanisms are: accumulation of snow on the upper surface of the glacier tongues and the landfast sea ice; and, bottom accretion of fresh, brackish and sea ice from fresh, brackish and sea water flowing below the glacier tongues and the landfast sea ice (Reference JeffriesJeffries, 1987).

There has been interest in the Ellesmere Island ice shelves for 40 years since they were first discovered and identified as the source of ice islands (Reference Koenig, Grcenaway, Dunbar and Hattersley-SmithKoenig and others, 1952). Ice islands are tabular icebergs that periodically calve from the ice shelves and then drift in the Arctic Ocean, often for decades. Because of their stability and longevity as they move around the Arctic Ocean in the Beaufort Gyre and the Transpolar Drift, a number of ice islands have been used as drifting research stations, e.g. T-3, ARLIS-II and Hobson’s Choice. The drift of ice islands also takes them into the shallow coastal waters of the southern Beaufort Sea off the Yukon Territory and Alaska where they are a potential hazard to offshore petroleum exploration and development.

As a consequence of the numerous possible combinations of primary and secondary growth mechanisms, the Ellesmere Island ice shelves, and thus the ice islands, may be stratigraphically complex, and comprise different ice types, with particular physical properties and structural characteristics which reflect different growth processes and conditions. A knowledge of the physical properties, structural characteristics and stratigraphy of ice islands is valuable for: (1) the safe design and operation of offshore structures, since the deformation and failure of the ice is influenced by those parameters (e.g. Reference Jeffries, Sinha and SackingerJeffries and others, 1990a, Reference Jeffries, Sinha, Sackinger, Ayorinde, Sinha and Sodhib); and (2) the elucidation of the origin and growth history of the parent ice shelf (e.g. Reference CraryCrary, 1958; Reference Muguruma and HiguchiMuguruma and Higuchi, 1963; Reference SmithSmith, 1964). The ice-core studies on ice islands T-3 (Reference CraryCrary, 1958; Reference Muguruma and HiguchiMuguruma and Higuchi, 1963) and ARLIS-II (Reference SmithSmith, 1964) documented the considerable structural-stratigraphic variability that must exist within the Ellesmere Island ice shelves, but unfortunately it was not possible to identify precisely theformer locations of those ice islands, i.e. their parent ice shelves.

In 1982-83, a number of ice islands, with a total area of about 40 km2, calved from East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf (Fig. 1) (Reference Jeffries and SersonJeffries and Serson, 1983). The largest of those ice islands subsequently became known as Hobson’s Choice (Fig. 1) and the site of a research station operated by the Polar Continental Shelf Project (Reference HobsonHobson and others, 1989). In 1985-87 we obtained four ice cores from the thickest, ice-shelf component of Hobson’s Choice Ice Island for a study of the physical and mechanical properties, structural characteristics and stratigraphy of the ice. In this paper the variations in the physical properties, structural characteristics and stratigraphy of the ice-island ice cores are discussed with particular reference to the growth conditions, processes and history of East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf.

II. Background on Hobson’s Choice Ice Island-Ward Hunt Ice Shelf

Ward Hunt Ice Shelf is the largest of the Ellesmere Island ice shelves. Located at the mouth of Disraeli Fiord, the ice shelf presently has an area of about 440 km2 and a thickness of 40-50 m.

Hobson’s Choice Ice Island (Fig. 2) and Ward Hunt Ice Shelf have a striking, undulating surface topography of linear hummocks (ridges) and depressions (troughs), commonly called "rolls" (Reference Hattersley-SmithHattersley-Smith, 1957). On East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf and Hobson’s Choice Ice Island the crest-to-crest spacing of the hummocks is typically 200 m and the depressions are of the order of 2 m deep. The present ice-shelf surface is an ablation surface where there has been a negative surface mass balance since the early part of this century (Reference Hattersley-Smith and SersonHattersley-Smith and Serson, 1970; Reference SersonSerson, 1979). Today, due to the warm summers and resultant snow and ice melt, shallow lakes occupy the lowest parts of the depressions. In winter, most lakes apparently freeze completely to the underlying ice.

Fig. 2. Oblique aerial photograph of Hobson’s Choke Ice Island. The linear depressions and hummocks are clearly visible on the ice-shelf component. Numbers 1 and 2 identify pre-existing multi-year landfast sea ice and incipient multi-year pack-ice components, respectively. The curly bracket lies above the general location of the Polar Continental Shelf Project research station and the sites of the ice cores; the arrow marks the hummock where core 86-1 was obtained. (Photograph by courtesy of Polar Continental Shelf Project.)

In its position across the mouth of Disraeli Fiord (Fig. 1) the ice shelf acts as a floating dam. Consequently, a layer of low-salinity water, with a depth equivalent to the ice-shelf draft (∼44m), lies year-round upon deeper sea water (Reference KeysKeys, 1978; Reference JeffriesJeffries, in press). Extremely negative δ18O values and high levels of tritium in the surface layer are evidence that snow-meltwater run-off from the surrounding land is the main contributor to the freshwater layer (Reference JeffriesJeffries, 1985, Reference Jeffriesin press).

Ward Hunt Ice Shelf is a sea-ice ice shelf, which originated about 3000 years ago as multi-year landfast sea ice grew across the mouth of Disraeli Fiord (Reference CraryCrary, 1960). There is no evidence that any part of the ice shelf originated by the seaward advance of grounded glaciers. Massive layers of sea ice and brackish ice, some exceeding 20 m thick, remain in the ice shelf to the west and south of Ward Hunt Island (Fig. 1) (Reference Lyons, Savin and TamburiLyons and others, 1971; Reference Jeffries, Sackinger, Krouse and SersonJeffries and others, 1988; Reference Jeffries and SackingerJeffries and Sackinger, 1989; Reference JeffriesJeffries (1991). Some of the brackish and sea ice is undoubtedly hundreds, possibly thousands of years old, yet it contains liquid brine in volumes exceeding those found in the much younger multi-year ice that covers most of the Arctic Ocean today (Reference JeffriesJeffries, 1991). The radar energy-attenuating properties of the liquid brine would account for the absence of bottom reflections from those areas of the ice shelf during airborne radio-echo sounding in 1981 (Reference Narod, Clarke and PragerNarod and others, 1988).

Bottom reflections were, however, obtained during radio-echo sounding over large areas of East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf and an ice thickness of 45-50 m was measured (Reference Narod, Clarke and PragerNarod and others, 1988). The implication that there was no sea ice to attenuate the radar energy in that part of the ice shelf was subsequently corroborated by liquid electrical conductivity and oxygen-isotope (δ18O) analysis of the first, 42 m core drilled right through the ice-shelf component of Hobson’s Choice Ice Island (Reference Jeffries, Sackinger, Krouse and SersonJeffries and others, 1988). The absence of sea ice was attributed to the turnover of ice by a process of bottom accretion of freshwater ice accompanied by surface ablation, which, over a 400-500 year period, led to the sea ice melting and running off at the surface (Reference Jeffries, Sackinger, Krouse and SersonJeffries and others, 1988).

Since that initial interpretation of the first Hobson’s Choice Ice Island ice-core record, we have made observations and measurements of ice-crystal structure, size and fabric in the three subsequent ice cores. On the basis of the new structural data and a re-examination of previous isotopic data, we have revised our interpretation of the stratigraphy, growth conditions, processes and history of East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf.

III. Methods

Ice cores from Hobson’s Choice Ice Island were obtained with a PICO (Polar Ice Coring Office) lightweight or similar auger in September 1985 (core 85-10), April-May 1986 (cores 86-1 and 86-2) and May 1987 (core 87-1). Core 85-10 was shared with a third party and only small pieces of ice from regularly spaced intervals along the entire length of the core were made available to us for analysis of SEC (specific electrolytic conductivity or liquid electrical conductivity), 18O/16O ratios (δ18O) and tritium. The full length of each of cores 86-1 and 86-2 was available for analysis of SEC, δ18O, tritium, bulk density, and ice-crystal structure, size and fabric. Core 87-1 was also shared with a third party, but large sections were available for the above analyses.

The length of each core, their topographic locations and positions relative to one another are illustrated in Figure 3. It is important to note that only core 85-10 was drilled right through the ice island. The other cores were not drilled as deep. Core 86-1 was drilled at the highest elevation at the crest of the first hummock about 100 m from the edge of the ice-shelf component (figs 2 and 3b). All depths in the ice refer to the top surface of core 86-1. Also, all core-data profiles are plotted with reference to the top of core 86-1.

Fig. 3. a. Location of ice cores relative to the undulating topography of hummocks and depressions. On the basis of topographic survey and cross-correlation between cores, the elevation differences of the other cores relative to core 86-1 are -2.11m (core 86-2), -1.70m (core 85-10) and -0.40m (core 87-1). b. Plan view of ice-core locations, including core depths. The minimum distance between cores is 100.6 m (cores 86-1 and 86-2) and the maximum distance is 432.3 m (cores 86-1 and 87-1). The cores were obtained within a distance of 750 m of the edge of the ice island corresponding to the line of fracture at the lime of calving, i.e. about 2.4 km from the former ice-shelf front.

Bulk density of individual core sections was determined by weighing in air on a triple-beam balance and measuring their dimensions with calipers. Using a band saw, horizontal and vertical sections were cut from individual pieces of cores 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1. Vertical thick sections of 1-2 mm thickness were illuminated in crossed polarizers and photographed for records of gross structural variations. Representative thick sections were then selected and reduced to a thickness of 1 mm before being photographed in plain light and between crossed polarizers. All horizontal sections were mounted on glass slides and reduced to a thickness of <0.5mm with a handheld microtome blade before being photographed between crossed polarizers.

c-axis orientations were determined using a Rigsby stage and the data were plotted on the lower hemisphere of a Schmidt net. The mean diameter of all ice crystals in each horizontal section was calculated according to

, where d is the mean ice-crystal diameter (mm) and N A is the number of crystals per unit area. All crystals falling across the edge of the measurement area were included; hence, all values of d are slightly underestimated. The adopted ice-texture classes are: fine, 15 mm; medium, 5-10 mm; coarse, 10-20 mm; very coarse, >20mm.

The 18O/16O ratios of melted samples were measured using a mass spectrometer. The oxygen-isotopic composition is expressed as δ18, the fractional difference in parts per thousand (per mil,

) between the isotope-abundance ratio (18O/,6O) of the unknown sample and a standard (V-SMOW: Vienna-Standard Mean Ocean Water). The tritium activity of melted samples from cores 85-10, 86-1 and 86-2 was measured by direct liquid scintillation counting without prior enrichment. Tritium activity is expressed in tritium units (TU) where 1 TU represents one tritium atom per 1018 hydrogen atoms. The SEC of melted samples was measured using a Beckman conductivity meter.

IV. Physical Properties, Structural Characteristics and Stratigraphy

Tritium

Tritium activity was measured at intervals along the length of cores 85-10, 86-1 and 86-2 (Fig. 4). In cores 86-1 and 86-2, the tritium values correspond only to those of the natural background levels. Similar values occur at equivalent depths in core 85-10. Below 38.70 m in core 8510, however, there are high tritium values, with a maximum of 71 TU at 41.54m (Fig. 4). High tritium values have been measured only in the ice at the bottom of core 85-10. Because the other cores were not drilled deep enough, it was not possible to determine whether high tritium values also occurred at the base of the ice at those locations. Nevertheless, the high tritium values in the lowermost 5 m of core 85-10 set that layer apart from the ice above.

Fig. 4. Tritium activity in cores 85-10, 86-1 and 86-2. Values to the left of the vertical dashed line at 25 TU correspond to those of natural background levels (Reference Gat, Fritz and FontesGat, 1980). Values to the right of the line are considered to be anthropogenic and, therefore, of recent origin.

δ18O and Sec

From the surface to the base, the entire thickness of Hobson’s Choice Ice Island has very negative δ18O values (Fig. 5). The very low SEC values also show that the ice contains few dissolved impurities (Fig. 5). A single high value of 261 µS cm−1 is equivalent to a salinity of between only 0.1 and

, i.e. still a very low level of dissolved impurities. On the basis of the high tritium activity at the base of the ice, two basic layers, stratum A and stratum B, are identified in core 85-10 (Fig. 5). The mean and range of δ18O and SEC values in each stratum are presented in Table 1. Since ice cores 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1 did not penetrate stratum B, they correspond entirely to stratum A. Their mean δ18O and SEC values are also presented in Table 1. The δ18O values of stratum A in each core are very similar. There are a few high SEC values, but as with that in core 85-10, they still represent a very low level of dissolved impurities.

Fig. 5. SEC and δ18O profiles in core 85-10. The base of the ice island-ice shelf and lowermost 5 m of ice where anthropogenic tritium was measured are marked.

Table I. Summary of ranges and mean (1 standard deviation) for SEC, δ 18O and bulk density data for ice cores 85-10 (strata A and B), 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1, Hobson’s Choice Ice Island-East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. The numbers in parentheses represent the number of samples analysed

Ice-Crystal Structure and Fabric

The ice crystals in each core are generally equi-dimensional in individual horizontal sections and,although there is some size variability, there is no crystal interlocking (Figs 6a, 7a and 8a). Vertically, however, the ice is not homogencous and on the basis of vertical crystal development, air bubbles and c-axis orientations, three basic ice types are identified.

Fig. 6. a. Horizontal thin section of medium texture ice (mean crystal diameter = 6.2 mm) from a depth of 7.14 m, ice core 87-1 (crossed polarizers and 10 mm grid). b. Fabric diagram for ice in Figure 6a. c. Vertical thick section of ice showing bubbles and evidence of stratification, 7.14-7.23m, core 87-1.

Fig. 7. a. Horizontal thin section of medium texture ice (mean crystal diameter = 9.8 mm) from a depth of 28.90 m, core 87-1 (crossed polarizers and 10mm grid), b. Fabric diagram for ice in Figure 7a. c. Vertical thick section (63 mm wide, 100 mm long in crossed polarizers) of columnar ice with highly elongate bubbles (arrows), 28.90–29.00m, core 87-1.

Fig. 8. a. Horizontal thin section of coarse texture ice (mean crystal diameter = 19.8mm) from a depth of 19.78m, core 86-2 (cross polarizers with a 10mm grid), b. Vertical thick section (60 mm wide, 200 mm long in crossed polarizers) of columnar ice with tubular bubbles (arrows), 19.78-19.98m, core 86-2.

Type 1 ice is invariably granular in texture, of medium grain-size (Fig. 6a) and has random c-axis orientations (Fig. 6b). Two types of bubble occur, always together: spherical bubbles typically 0.1-1.0mm, but occasionally up to 3 mm diameter; slightly elongate bubbles 2–3 mm long, with the long axis normal or nearly normal to the ice surface (Fig. 6c). The ice in Figure 6c also shows evidence of stratification, with a 60 mm thick layer of relatively clear ice sandwiched between thin, bubbly ice layers. Many similar layers are evident throughout the cores, but their number and thickness have not been systematically investigated. Each core also contains a few, thin (5-30 mm) layers of very bubbly, low-density ice resembling firn.

Type 2 ice is also generally of medium grain-size in cross-section (Fig. 7a), but in vertical sections there are large columnar crystals in addition to a few equant crystals (Fig. 7b). There are spherical bubbles, plus elongate bubbles of 25-30 mm length oriented normal or nearly normal to the ice surface (Fig. 7b). The tendency for the data to cluster about the centre of the Schmidt net (Fig. 7c) indicates the c-axes of the ice crystals are oriented in the near-vertical.

Type 3 ice invariably has a coarse or very coarse texture (Fig. 8a), with large columnar crystals (Fig. 8b) and horizontal c-axis orientations. In addition to some spherical and elongate bubbles, this ice often contains tubular bubbles 1-2 mm in diameter, as much as 300 mm long and oriented normal to the ice surface (Fig. 8b).

Bulk Density

The bulk-density data for cores 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1 are summarized in Table 1. Although core 87-1 is slightly more dense than cores 86-1 and 86-2, they essentially have very similar density ranges and mean values. The mean and range of density values for cores 86-1 and 86-2 are particularly alike, and each density profile shows density increasing towards the bottom of each core (Fig. 9). The low value of 665 kg m−3 in core 86-1 occurred at the ice surface where melting along grain boundaries the previous summer had created a loose agglomeration of crystals similar to candled ice.

Fig. 9. Bulk density variations as a function of depth in cores 86-1 (left) and 86-2 (right). The straight lines are represented by the following regression equations, each with a correlation coefficient of 0.6 significant at the 95% confidence level: core 86-1, density = 0.88, depth + 858kg m−3; core 86-2, density = 0.88, depth. + 862kgm-3. The minimum value of 665kg m−3 at the top of core 86-1 has not been plotted.

Ice Types and Their Origin

Surface Accumulation

Reference Ragle, Blair and PerssonRagle and others (1964) referred to the ice that had accumulated at the surface of Ward Hunt Ice Shelf during periods of positive mass balance as "glacier ice". However, as noted in section II, there is no evidence that any part of Ward Hunt Ice Shelf originated from glaciers. Marshall (Reference Marshall1955, Reference Marshall and Bushnell1960) used the term "iced-firn" to describe ice that had accumulated by the thawing and refreezing of snowpack on the ice shelves. Reference KoernerKoerner (1968) used the term "depositional ice", which includes firn ice and superimposed ice, some of which has random c-axis orientations and no bubble stretching. Superimposed ice accumulates as water percolating through the snow or firn directly in contact with the ice refreezes, or as water flowing over a bare ice surface freezes (Reference KoernerKoerner, 1970). The three ice types identified in the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island cores closely resemble different types of depositional and superimposed ice. The combination of low δ18O and SEC values (Fig. 4 and Table 1) is additional evidence of ice that originated as snow.

The type 3 ice has the characteristics of lake ice formed by the sustained freezing of standing water, i.e. coarse/very coarse columnar ice with horizontal c-axis orientations and tubular bubbles (e.g. Reference Gow and LangstonGow and Langston, 1977). Huge lakes have been observed in the superimposed ice zone of the Devon Island Ice Cap (Reference KoernerKoerner, 1970). In view of the lakes that presently form in the ice shelf-ice island depressions, it is not considered unusual to find lake ice in the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island cores. Lake-ice lenses embedded in the iced-firn at Ward Hunt Ice Shelf were also identified by Marshall (Reference Marshall1955, Reference Marshall and Bushnell1960), Reference CraryCrary (1958) and Reference Ragle, Blair and PerssonRagle and others (1964).

The lake ice in the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island cores indicates complete saturation of the snow cover followed by melting and run-off into pools and lakes. Reference KoernerKoerner (1970) reported that in cases where the snow cover becomes completely saturated, but little or no run-off occurs, slush ice with vertical c-axes forms. The type 2 in Hobson’s Choice Ice Island is considered to be slush ice. Type 1 ice represents the least saturation of the snow cover and, for it, the old term "iced-firn" is retained.

No matter what the condition of the snow cover and whether run-off occurred, each of the three ice types represents accumulation due to the rapid transformation of snow to ice in the duration of one summer, and probably in the upper surface metre or less of the ice shelf. The progressive accumulation of ice at the surface of the ice shelf would increase the overburden pressure, which might account for the observed increase in density towards the base of stratum A (Fig. 9).

Basal Processes

It is generally accepted that the entire Ward Hunt Ice Shelf originated as thick, landfast sea ice and that sea-ice basement or proto-ice-shelf thickened further by surface accumulation and/or bottom accretion. It was noted in section II that thick layers of sea ice and brackish ice, some perhaps the original basement ice, and still overlain by superimposed ice, remain in the western and southern parts of Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. In contrast, although the cores from Hobson’s Choice Ice Island contain a record of surface accumulation and bottom accretion, it is apparent that there is no longer any sea ice contained in a large part of East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf.

Initially, it was believed that any former sea ice had been lost by surface ablation when bottom accretion accompanied surface lowering (Reference Jeffries, Sackinger, Krouse and SersonJeffries and others, 1988). Now, with the evidence of the surface accumulation of almost 40 m of depositional-superimposed ice, sea-ice loss at the surface cannot have occurred and it must be concluded that the original sea ice was removed by bottom melting. It is also quite possible that bottom melting removed ice from the base of stratum A prior to the accretion of stratum B, including some or all of the first ice to accumulate on the original sea-ice platform c. 3000 BP.

Since 1952, atmospheric tritium levels have exceeded natural background levels due to the injection of tritium resulting from above-ground thermonuclear bomb tests (Reference Gat, Fritz and FontesGat, 1980). The absence of high anthropogenic values at any depth in the ice above 38.70 m (Fig. 4) is consistent with a negative ice-shelf-surface mass balance this century (see section II) and the measured natural background levels of tritium are to be expected. Only in the thin annual lake-ice layers at the surface of the depression lakes are anthropogenic tritium levels as high as 125 TU found, indicating recent accumulation from snow-meltwatcr, the main component of the lakes (Reference JeffriesJeffries, 1985). Since the elevated tritium levels at the base of the ice island are of the same order of magnitude as those in the surface lakes, it suggests that both are contemporaneous and snow meltwater also may be the source of the lowermost ice-island-ice-shelf layer.

The highly negative δ18O values associated with the high tritium values in stratum B (Fig. 4 and Table 1) are additional evidence of a precipitation source, since they are similar to recent snowfall δ18O values in this region (Reference Jeffries and KrouseJeffries and Krouse, 1987). They also discount the possibility that the ice accumulated by accretion of sea ice after the calving in 1982-83 when the ice island began to drift in sea water; the δ18O values of sea water are typically close to zero per mil

, considerably more positive than those in stratum B (Table 1). The most plausible origin of ice with high tritium values at the base of the ice island is ice accretion at the base of East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf prior to the calving, from a fresh-water layer of precipitation origin.

The most likely source of fresh water is Disraeli Fiord, south of the ice shelf (Fig. 1). There, the 44 m deep freshwater layer of snow-meltwater origin at the fiord surface also has negative δ18O values, and tritium levels of the same order of magnitude as those at the base of the ice island (Reference JeffriesJeffries, 1985). It has been believed for some time that water from the surface of Disraeli Fiord flows north below Ward Hunt Ice Shelf and that ice accretes to the base of the ice shelf from this low-salinity water (Reference Lyons, Savin and TamburiLyons and others, 1971; Reference KeysKeys, 1978). Frazil and platelet ice is known to grow due to supercooling at the halocline in the fiord (Reference KeysKeys, 1978) and it is quite possible that this process also occurs at the base of the eastern ice shelf. In the absence of ice-texture and fabric data, though, the growth processes cannot be identified with certainty at this time. Nevertheless, a fresh-water outflow from Disraeli Fiord remains the most probable source of water for ice accretion at the base of Ward Hunt Ice Shelf and thus the source of the lowermost 5 m layer of Hobson’s Choice Ice Island.

Reference JeffriesJeffries (in press) calculated a mean basal accretion rate of 96 mm a" (water equivalent) for the interval 195282 and a rate of 141 mm a−1 for the interval 1963-82. Both rates exceed the mean annual surface losses of 74 mm a−1 since the mid-1960s and it has been concluded that the outflow of fresh water from the fiord presently plays a significant role in the overall mass balance of the eastern ice shelf, where the thickness is at least being maintained and perhaps even increased slightly (Reference JeffriesJeffries, in press).

The accretion of stratum B post-dates the certain loss of the original sea-ice platform. Basal melting is implicated in the loss of sea ice, and perhaps some ablation losses of the oldest superimposed ice. Thus, stratum A now rests unconformably on stratum B.

V. Structural-Stratigraphic Variability in Stratum A

On the basis of δ18O and tritium values, and ice-crystal structure and fabric variations, a basic two-layer stratigraphy has been identified in Hobson’s Choice Ice Island-East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. Most of the ice (stratum A) has accumulated from snowpack at the surface of the ice shelf and raises the question of whether the ice contains any kind of record of past variations in the surface regime. In this section, δ18O and ice-crystal structure and size variations in cores 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1 are described and possible causes and consequences of the stratigraphic variability related to surface processes and conditions are discussed.

δ18O

The δ18O profile for core 87-1 has been divided into three layers: A-I, A-II and A-III (Fig. 10). The grounds for this division are discontinuities in the isotopic profile and variations in δ18O values that give rise to a middle layer (A-II) with somewhat more negative δ18O values than the top (A-III) or bottom (A-I) layers. A similar three-layer stratigraphy has been identified in cores 85-10, 86-1 and 86-2 according to the clustering of δ18O values and discontinuities in the isotopic profiles. The mean and range of δ18O values in each of the three sub-strata in cores 85-10, 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1 are summarized in Table 2.

Fig. 10. δ18O profile in core 87-1. The three sub-strata, A-I, A-II and A-III, are denoted by the horizontal dashed lines. The mean δ18O values for each substratum are also shown.

Table 2. Depth intervals, andδ18O ranges and means (±1 standard deviation) for the three sub-strata of stratum A in Hobson’s Choice Ice Island-East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. The numbers in parentheses represent the number of samples analysed

A one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) shows there are (1) statistically significant differences in the mean δ18O values of the three sub-strata within individual cores, with the possible exception of core 86-2 (Appendix A), but (2) no statistically significant between-core differences in the mean δ18O values of a given sub-stratum, e.g. there is no statistically significant difference between the mean δ18O values of stratum A-I in each of the four cores (Appendix B). Although the ANOVA of core 86-2 suggests it is more homogeneous than the other cores, there is still a better than 82% probability (Table A-III in Appendix A) of being correct in assuming there are statistically significant differences between the sub-strata.

The results of the one-way ANOVA are sufficiently encouraging to proceed to a more robust two-way ANOVA. The ANOVA table shows there is an almost 80% probability that the two factors, the sub-strata and the cores, were not interacting. This adds to the power of the ANOVA and favours the conclusion that there are statistically significant within-core differences in the δ18O values of the three sub-strata, but no significant between-core differences (Appendix C).

Ice-Crystal Structure and Size

Ice-crystal size profiles identifying the occurrence of iced-firn, slush ice and lake ice in cores 86-1 and 86-2 are presented in Figure 11. The sub-strata A-I, A-II and A-III previously identified according to δ18O variations are marked and it can be seen that they also coincide with ice-crystal size and structural variations. Note that the crystal-diameter scale for core 86-2 is compressed by a factor of two compared to that of core 86-1; hence, the variations in ice-crystal diameters are somewhat larger than are immediately apparent.

Fig. 11. Ice-crystal size variations in cores 86-1 (a: left) and 86-2 (b: right). Solid circles represent granular iced-firn, unaccompanied open circles denote columnar slush ice, and open circles accompanied by a T represent lake ice with tubular bubbles. Also illustrated as horizontal dashed lines are the boundaries between the three substrata, A-I, A-II and A-III.

The middle layer of core 86-1 is entirely iced-firn with mean crystal diameters all <10 mm. This contrasts sharply with the middle layer of core 86-2, which comprises iced-firn, slush ice and lake ice with ice-crystal diameters of as much as 46.6 mm. In both cores the bottom layer comprises iced-firn and slush ice, but the crystal diameters are a little larger in core 86-2. Substratum A-III in core 86-2 is very thin and thus difficult to compare objectively with the top layer of core 86-1. However, it is worth noting that the larger crystal sizes of the slush and lake ice in the top layer of core 86-1 contrast with the uniform iced-firn layer below. Although the ANOVA of the core 86-2 δ18O data suggest it is more homogeneous than the other cores, the qualitative within-core ice-crystal size and structure differences in core 86-2 and the differences between cores 86-1 and 86-2 indicate that core 86-2 is far from homogeneous and favours the division into three sub-strata.

Similar occurrences of each ice type and patterns of ice-crystal diameter variability were found in core 87-1. The mean and range of ice-crystal diameter values in each of the three sub-strata in cores 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1 are summarized in Table 3. Analysis of variance of those data has not been done, as the differences between the substrata are considered to be sufficiently evident and in accord with those identified by analysis of variance of the conservative tracer, δ18O.

Table 3. Ranges and means ( 1 standard deviation) of ice-crystal diameter values (mm) for three substrata identified in stratum A, ice cores 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1, Hobson’s Choice Ice Island-East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf Numbers in parentheses represent the number of horizontal thin sections for which a mean crystal diameter value was determined

Thickness of Sub-Strata A-I, A-II and A-III

In addition to the within-core and between-core differences in δ18O and ice-crystal size–ice-type variations in the three sub-strata of stratum A, there are also within-core and between-core differences in the thickness of the individual strata (Table 2). Strata A-I, A-II and A-III in cores 86-1 and 87-1 are each of similar thickness. On the other hand, stratum A-II in core 86-2 is the thickest of all the strata, its top being at a shallower depth and the base being deeper than the inter-layer boundaries in the other cores (e.g. Fig. 11b). For example, the top of stratum A-II in core 86-2 is 4.89 m higher than in core 86-1, while the base of stratum A-II in core 86-2 is 2.72 m lower than in core 86-1 (Fig. 11). The variations in the thickness of the sub-strata are illustrated in Figure 12 and the implications of the inferred stratigraphic variations are discussed below.

Fig. 12. Diagrammatic representation of the present surface of Hobson’s Choice Ice Island and ice-core locations, the ice-island-ice-shelf stratigraphy of the two primary strata (A and B) and three secondary strata (A-I, A-II and A-III) representing major accumulation periods, unconformities representing major ablation periods (A-Ia, A-IIa and A-Illa), and inferred topographic changes at past ice-shelf surfaces. Not to scale.

Discontinuous Surface Accumulation

It has already been noted that bottom melting could have removed some of the ice that initially began to accumulate on the original sea-ice platform of the eastern ice shelf. Ice losses by surface ablation might also have occurred, since, as the ice-crystal structures indicate, mcltwater has been a major factor in the build-up of ice at the surface.

As a consequence of the negative mass-balance regime during the greater part of this century, there has been considerable ice loss from the surface and many years of previous ice accumulation have been removed (Reference Hattersley-Smith and SersonHatters-ley-Smith and Serson, 1970; Reference SersonSerson, 1979). If positive mass-balance conditions were to resume, the new ice would rest unconformably upon the old and a relict ablation surface would mark the boundary. In ice cores from elsewhere in the Canadian High Arctic, e.g. Meighen Ice Cap (525 km southwest of Ward Hunt Ice Shelf), relict ablation surfaces have been identified by δ18O and ice-crystal-size discontinuities separating unconformable ice layers with contrasting properties (Reference KoernerKoerner, 1968; Reference Koerner, Paterson and KrouseKoerner and others, 1973; Reference Koerner and PatersonKoerner and Paterson, 1974).

Similar phenomena have been identified in the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island cores and it is believed that the boundaries between the sub-strata in stratum A also are relict ablation surfaces, representing previous episodes when many years of accumulated ice were lost. Long-term accumulation on the ice-shelf surface evidently has been discontinuous and the three sub-strata of stratum A, which represent three major accumulation periods (periods A-I, A-II and A-III; Fig. 12), are unconformable (denoted U in Figure 12). In addition to the present period of negative surface mass balance (period A-IIIa, Fig. 12), the ice-core records indicate there have been two previous major periods of surface lowering (periods A-Ia and A-IIa; Fig. 12). Consequently, the ice cores contain an incomplete record of accumulation at the surface of East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf.

On the basis of early ice-core studies of ice island T-3 and Ward Hunt Ice Shelf west and southwest of Ward Hunt Island, only one major ablation period was identified and it was marked by a visible concentration of dust (Marshall Reference Marshall1955, Reference Marshall and Bushnell1960; Reference CraryCrary, 1958, Reference Crary1960). No visible dust horizons were found in the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island cores and their absence may be a consequence of distance from local dust sources. The discovery of an additional ablation period may be due to the greater depth from which we obtained cores, or perhaps because previous investigators had measured too few ice-core parameters to enable recognition of an additional warm interval in their cores.

Marshall (Reference Marshall1955,Reference Marshall and Bushnell1960) estimated a water-equivalent accumulation varying between 76 and 133 mm a-1. The stratified ice illustrated in Figure 3c suggests 52 mm a-1 of water-equivalent accumulation, but other stratified ice layers are thicker, indicating greater annual accumulation. Because of the incomplete accumulation record, detailed determinations of past surface-accumulation rates at East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf have not been attempted. The discontinuous accumulation record also precludes accurate dating of the ice and thus identification of the timing of the warm intervals. The one warm interval identified in earlier ice cores may have ended c. 1600 BP(Reference CraryCrary, 1960), which coincides with a warm interval postulated c. 2400-1400BP (Reference Lyons and MielkeLyons and Mielke, 1973). However, those estimates were based on somewhat unreliable data and inappropriate comparisons with other palaeo-environmental records; hence, no attempt has been made here to postulate dates for the timing of the ablation periods identified in the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island cores.

Surface Topographic Changes

According to Figure 12 the period A-Ia unconformity in each core, i.e. the top of stratum A-I, has the same configuration as the present surface. On the other hand, the period A-IIa unconformity in each core apparently is 180 out of phase with the present surface and the unconformity below. This suggests that the accumulation of stratum A-II occurred on a relict ablation surface with a topography similar to the present topography, i.e. hummocks at the sites of cores 86-1 and 87-1, whereas the accumulation of stratum A-III occurred when there was a hummock at the present site of core 86-2 and depressions at the present sites of the other cores.

The changing configuration of the unconformities implies an inversion of relief. Further, since the unconformities represent ablation periods, the topographic changes must have occurred during the prolonged ablation periods. It is generally accepted that the undulations are primarily ablation features and their persistence is related to the combined influence of prevailing winds and relatively warm lake water, which cause melt-pool elongation and coalescence (Reference Hattersley-SmithHattersley-Smith, 1957; Reference CraryCrary, 1960). The inversion of relief inferred from the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island ice-core records is consistent with previous observations of ablation-related topographic changes on ice island T-3 (Reference CraryCrary, 1958; Reference Smith and RaaschSmith, 1961) and on Ward Hunt Ice Shelf where the phenomenon was described as a long-term migration of the rolls (Reference ListerLister, 1962).

The differences in the thickness of the individual strata from core to core, and the depth differentials between their tops and bottoms, are a measure of the relative relief of the former undulations. Thus, for example, the depth differentials between the unconformities at the top and base of stratum A-II in cores 86-1 and 86-2 (Fig. 11) represent the depth of the depressions from hummock crest to depression bottom. Reference ListerLister (1962) summarized the measured depression-depth data, which varied spatially from 0.4 to 3.5 m, with an overall mean value of 2.05 m on Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. The relative relief variations of the former undulations (4.89 and 2.72 m) are consistent with the present relief and indicate that, although the siting of hummocks and depressions may have changed considerably, no unusual changes occurred in their dimensions.

The inferred changes in the spatial arrangement of the hummocks and depressions would have caused considerable temporal variations in the drainage conditions at the surface of the ice shelf. This would account for much of the variation of ice-crystal structure and size in the ice cores. The depressions would have tended to be wetter than the adjacent hummocks and consequently, as observed in cores 86-1 and 86-2, a greater amount of slush and lake ice would occur there (Fig. 12). The contrast between relatively dry, well-drained hummocks and wetter, less well-drained depressions is less evident in stratum A-I (e.g. Fig. 12) where slush ice is a significant component in each of the three cores. This might be evidence of a generally less well-developed surface-drainage system during period A-I than during the two later accumulation periods.

VI. Discussion and Summary

Primarily on the basis of δ18O and tritium data for core 85-10, it was previously concluded that East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf is a homogeneous slab of fresh-water ice, as a result of a 400-500 year period of surface ablation accompanied by bottom accretion of ice from fresh water flowing below the ice shelf (Reference Jeffries, Sackinger, Krouse and SersonJeffries and others, 1988). The results of further ice-core analysis now show that East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf is far from homogeneous. Two primary ice layers of different origin have now been identified: stratum A represents surface accumulation of ice from snowpacks; stratum B represents recent bottom accretion from fresh water.

Stratum A

Stratum A includes the uppermost 35-38 m of the ice island and is all depositional-superimposed ice comprising three ice types: iced-firn, slush ice and lake ice. Within stratum A, three secondary layers or sub-strata, A-I, A-II and A-III, have been identified according to stratigraphic discontinuities in the δ18O profiles and ice-crystal structure and size variations. The three sub-strata represent three major periods of accumulation interrupted by three major ablation periods during which previous accumulations of ice must have been lost. Consequently, the accumulation record in stratum A is incomplete and it is difficult to estimate accumulation rates or to assign absolute dates to any part of it.

In addition to the identification of the accumulation periods and ablation periods, the down-core variations in δ18O and ice-crystal structure and size variations have enabled other palaeo-environmental changes to be identified. First, even during the cooler periods of surface accumulation, the regime was dominated by meltwater, which played a key role in the transformation of snow to the three categories of ice. Secondly, significant topographic changes, amounting to an inversion of the relief, occurred during the warmer ablation periods as the surface was lowered.

The pervasive effects of meltwater and the topographic changes make it difficult to advance beyond these general palaeo-environmental interpretations of the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island cores. The topographic influences on the ice physical properties, structural characteristics and stratigraphy probably exceed climato-logical influences and mask palaeoclimatic signals in the cores. For a complete discussion of the specific problems associated with the palaeoclimatic interpretation of ice-core records, particularly of δ18O data, from locations where meltwater influences and topographic changes have been significant, the reader is referred to Reference KoernerKoerner (1968), Reference Koerner, Paterson and KrouseKoerner and others (1973) and Reference Koerner and PatersonKoerner and Paterson (1974).

Stratum B

Stratum B at the base of the ice shelf is a little over 5 m thick and its high tritium values indicate that it has accreted only since 1952 at the earliest. Consequently, other than the contemporary lake ice at the surface, stratum B is the youngest ice in the eastern ice shelf. The most plausible source of the ice and the tritium is accretion from fresh water flowing out of Disraeli Fiord beneath East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. The accretion of stratum B supports the original conclusion of a sea-water inflow below the western ice shelf into Disraeli Fiord, and an outflow, including fresh-water-sea-water stratification, below the eastern ice shelf (Reference Jeffries, Sackinger, Krouse and SersonJeffries and others, 1988; Fig. 6).

In view of the age of stratum B, it is certain that stratum A did not accumulate on it. Instead, since the entire Ward Hunt Ice Shelf in all probability originated as a thick sea-ice sheet across the mouth of Disraeli Fiord c. 3000 BP, it is reasonable to assume that stratum A began to accumulate on that sea ice and thus contains no ice older than 3000 years. The sea ice no longer exists and strata A and B are unconformable.

The present perennial availability of a large volume of fresh water in Disraeli Fiord and its outflow below the ice shelf must be related, at least in part, to the warm summers that have prevailed in this region for the greater part of this century. For the same reason, it may be assumed that large volumes of fresh water were available in Disraeli Fiord during the previous two warm climatic intervals. The outflow of that water below the ice shelf was probably responsible for the melting and eventual removal of the original sea ice on which stratum A began to accumulate. But why there should have been bottom accretion during just the last 35-40 years rather than further bottom melting, as has happened apparently during the previous warm episodes, is unclear. In addition to climatic influences, variability in the sub-ice-shelf water circulation and thermal regime probably also play an inportant role in basal processes.

VII. Conclusion

The growth history of East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf has been more complex than was originally concluded by Reference Jeffries, Sackinger, Krouse and SersonJeffries and others (1988). The previous, simple model of a 400-500 year surface-ablation period balanced by bottom accretion to produce a homogeneous fresh-water ice sheet was formulated in the absence of crystallographic data. The addition of crystallographic data and a re-examination of the original δ18O and tritium data has provided compelling evidence of previous periods of substantial accumulation and ablation at the surface, considerable bottom melting in the past, as well as modern basal accretion at East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. The analysis of multiple cores from Hobson’s Choice Ice Island also has revealed evidence of past topographic changes at the surface of the ice shelf. Thus, in addition to documenting ice physical-structural property variations, identifying different ice types, and delineating the stratigraphy of the ice island, plus elucidation of some aspects of ice-shelf surface and bottom processes, this study has illustrated the value of multi-parameter analysis of multiple ice cores from a given locality, where possible.

Acknowledgements

This work has been supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Morgantown Energy Technology Centre (Arctic/ Offshore Program) and the Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks. Logistical support for work on Hobson’s Choice Ice Island and Ward Hunt Ice Shelf has been provided by the Polar Continental Shelf Project. The Stable Isotope Laboratory, University of Calgary, is supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. O.-P. Nordlund, J. Poplin and D, Smith assisted with the ice-core drilling, L. Loadman surveyed the ice-core positions and M. Schmidt provided support and encouragement on Hobson’s Choice Ice Island. K. Morris and J. Groves helped with ice-core transportation from Whitehorse to Fairbanks. Dr P. X. Quang gave advice on the analysis of variance. One of us (M.O.J.) is particularly grateful for Dr R. M. Koerner’s continued interest in the ice-shelf research over the years and for his review of this particular paper.

The accuracy of references in the text and in this list is the responsibility of the authors, to whom queries should be addressed.

Appendix A One-Way Analysis of Variance of Substrata δ18O Variations Within Cores

Table A-I. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in core 85-10

Table A-II. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in core 86-1

Table A-III. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in core 86-2

Table A-IV. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in core 87-1

Appendix B One-Way Analysis of Variance of Substrata δ18O Variations Between Cores

Table B-I. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in stratum A-I

Table B-II. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ 18O values in stratum A-II

Table B-III. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in stratum A-III

Appendix C Two-Way Analysis of Variance of Within-Core and Between-Core δ18 Variations in Sub-Strata A-I, A-II AND A-III

Table C-I. Results of a two-way ANOVA

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Figure 0

Fig. 1. Map of Ward Hunt Ice Shelf and the location and extent of the ice-island calving that occurred in 1982-83. The approximate ice-shelf location of the Hobson’s Choice Ice Island ice cores is marked.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Oblique aerial photograph of Hobson’s Choke Ice Island. The linear depressions and hummocks are clearly visible on the ice-shelf component. Numbers 1 and 2 identify pre-existing multi-year landfast sea ice and incipient multi-year pack-ice components, respectively. The curly bracket lies above the general location of the Polar Continental Shelf Project research station and the sites of the ice cores; the arrow marks the hummock where core 86-1 was obtained. (Photograph by courtesy of Polar Continental Shelf Project.)

Figure 2

Fig. 3. a. Location of ice cores relative to the undulating topography of hummocks and depressions. On the basis of topographic survey and cross-correlation between cores, the elevation differences of the other cores relative to core 86-1 are -2.11m (core 86-2), -1.70m (core 85-10) and -0.40m (core 87-1). b. Plan view of ice-core locations, including core depths. The minimum distance between cores is 100.6 m (cores 86-1 and 86-2) and the maximum distance is 432.3 m (cores 86-1 and 87-1). The cores were obtained within a distance of 750 m of the edge of the ice island corresponding to the line of fracture at the lime of calving, i.e. about 2.4 km from the former ice-shelf front.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Tritium activity in cores 85-10, 86-1 and 86-2. Values to the left of the vertical dashed line at 25 TU correspond to those of natural background levels (Gat, 1980). Values to the right of the line are considered to be anthropogenic and, therefore, of recent origin.

Figure 4

Fig. 5. SEC and δ18O profiles in core 85-10. The base of the ice island-ice shelf and lowermost 5 m of ice where anthropogenic tritium was measured are marked.

Figure 5

Table I. Summary of ranges and mean (1 standard deviation) for SEC, δ18O and bulk density data for ice cores 85-10 (strata A and B), 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1, Hobson’s Choice Ice Island-East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. The numbers in parentheses represent the number of samples analysed

Figure 6

Fig. 6. a. Horizontal thin section of medium texture ice (mean crystal diameter = 6.2 mm) from a depth of 7.14 m, ice core 87-1 (crossed polarizers and 10 mm grid). b. Fabric diagram for ice in Figure 6a. c. Vertical thick section of ice showing bubbles and evidence of stratification, 7.14-7.23m, core 87-1.

Figure 7

Fig. 7. a. Horizontal thin section of medium texture ice (mean crystal diameter = 9.8 mm) from a depth of 28.90 m, core 87-1 (crossed polarizers and 10mm grid), b. Fabric diagram for ice in Figure 7a. c. Vertical thick section (63 mm wide, 100 mm long in crossed polarizers) of columnar ice with highly elongate bubbles (arrows), 28.90–29.00m, core 87-1.

Figure 8

Fig. 8. a. Horizontal thin section of coarse texture ice (mean crystal diameter = 19.8mm) from a depth of 19.78m, core 86-2 (cross polarizers with a 10mm grid), b. Vertical thick section (60 mm wide, 200 mm long in crossed polarizers) of columnar ice with tubular bubbles (arrows), 19.78-19.98m, core 86-2.

Figure 9

Fig. 9. Bulk density variations as a function of depth in cores 86-1 (left) and 86-2 (right). The straight lines are represented by the following regression equations, each with a correlation coefficient of 0.6 significant at the 95% confidence level: core 86-1, density = 0.88, depth + 858kg m−3; core 86-2, density = 0.88, depth. + 862kgm-3. The minimum value of 665kg m−3 at the top of core 86-1 has not been plotted.

Figure 10

Fig. 10. δ18O profile in core 87-1. The three sub-strata, A-I, A-II and A-III, are denoted by the horizontal dashed lines. The mean δ18O values for each substratum are also shown.

Figure 11

Table 2. Depth intervals, andδ18O ranges and means (±1 standard deviation) for the three sub-strata of stratum A in Hobson’s Choice Ice Island-East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf. The numbers in parentheses represent the number of samples analysed

Figure 12

Fig. 11. Ice-crystal size variations in cores 86-1 (a: left) and 86-2 (b: right). Solid circles represent granular iced-firn, unaccompanied open circles denote columnar slush ice, and open circles accompanied by a T represent lake ice with tubular bubbles. Also illustrated as horizontal dashed lines are the boundaries between the three substrata, A-I, A-II and A-III.

Figure 13

Table 3. Ranges and means ( 1 standard deviation) of ice-crystal diameter values (mm) for three substrata identified in stratum A, ice cores 86-1, 86-2 and 87-1, Hobson’s Choice Ice Island-East Ward Hunt Ice Shelf Numbers in parentheses represent the number of horizontal thin sections for which a mean crystal diameter value was determined

Figure 14

Fig. 12. Diagrammatic representation of the present surface of Hobson’s Choice Ice Island and ice-core locations, the ice-island-ice-shelf stratigraphy of the two primary strata (A and B) and three secondary strata (A-I, A-II and A-III) representing major accumulation periods, unconformities representing major ablation periods (A-Ia, A-IIa and A-Illa), and inferred topographic changes at past ice-shelf surfaces. Not to scale.

Figure 15

Table A-I. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in core 85-10

Figure 16

Table A-II. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in core 86-1

Figure 17

Table A-III. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in core 86-2

Figure 18

Table A-IV. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in core 87-1

Figure 19

Table B-I. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in stratum A-I

Figure 20

Table B-II. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in stratum A-II

Figure 21

Table B-III. Results of a one-way ANOVA of the variation of δ18O values in stratum A-III

Figure 22

Table C-I. Results of a two-way ANOVA