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Response to Comment by A. RICHTER, M. HORWATH, R. DIETRICH (2016) on ‘Mass gains of the Antarctic ice sheet exceed losses’ by H. J. Zwally and others (2015)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2016

H. JAY. ZWALLY*
Affiliation:
Cryospheric Sciences Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA Earth System Science Interdisciplinary Center, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
JUN LI
Affiliation:
SGT, Inc., NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
JOHN W. ROBBINS
Affiliation:
Craig Technologies, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
JACK L. SABA
Affiliation:
Science Systems and Applications, Inc., NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
DONGHUI YI
Affiliation:
SGT, Inc., NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
ANITA C. BRENNER
Affiliation:
Sigma Space Corporation, Lanham, MD, USA
*
E-mail: H. JAY. ZWALLY <jayzwallyice@verizon.net>
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Abstract

Type
Letter
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2016

1. SUMMARY

Richter, Howarth and Dietrich (Reference Richter, Howarth and Dietrich2016) and their Russian colleagues have made very precise geodetic measurements on Vostok Subglacial Lake using GPS (and GLONASS) in situ measurements. They use those measurements to estimate the rate of change of the height of the ice-surface (dH surface/dt, or dh gps/dt in our notation) over the Lake, concluding that the surface height has been stable at a rate close to zero (e.g. dh gps/dt = +0.3 ± 4.9 mm a–1 in Richter and others (Reference Richter2008) and dh gps/dt = +1 ± 5 mm a–1 in Richter and others (Reference Richter2014)). That conclusion differs from our findings of an average rate of +20 mm a–1 over the Lake, as derived from two independent satellite altimetry measurements (ERS-1/ERS-2 and ICESat) over 17 a.

The objective of geodetic measurements with markers in the firn is to estimate a relatively small rate (e.g. 10 mm a−1) of surface motion to an accuracy of a few mm a−1 as the difference of two larger rates (e.g. −62.1 mm a−1 marker velocity and 72 mm a−1 new snow growth), where the uncertainty in snow growth is large for reasons we described. Our finding of a variation of dh/dt from <0 to >30 mm a–1 over the Lake from ICESat data indicates how important taking account of the spatial variability is to achieve valid comparisons with the satellite data. We also believe that the vertical strain rate in the compressing firn and the emplacement of the geodetic markers requires more attention. The lack of a discernable systematic reduction in dh/dt at the transitions from the grounded ice to the ice over the Lake or in the central area (certainly not in a ratio of 8%) raises fundamental questions about the concept of hydrostatic equilibrium as applied to the analysis of ‘floating’ of ice on Lake Vostok. Overall, we believe that the uncertainties in the geodetic measurements are sufficiently large that the in situ measurements and our altimetry measurements are not necessarily inconsistent.

2. DISCUSSION OF MEASUREMENTS

1. ‘Richter and others (Reference Richter 2014 ) present results of….kinematic GNSS profiling…repeated in 2012 and 2013. In 308 crossovers,…a mean…of….1 ± 5 mm a−1 was determined,….’

We did not address that measurement, but note that the profiling was over an area of a strong northeast to southwest gradient in dH surface/dt with values ranging from <−40 mm a−1 on the northeast to >+40 mm a−1 on the southwest. Their RMS of dH surface/dt from 308 out of 837 total crossovers differences is ±15 mm a−1 (inappropriately labeled std dev.). They say: ‘This leads to a formal accuracy of….1 mm a−1’, which presumably is the sigma of the mean assuming a Gaussian distribution of a random variable. However, their dH surface/dt are systematically distributed over a strong gradient in dH surface/dt around the station, likely due to the influence of the station on upwind and downwind snow drift. Therefore, their ‘….Allowing for a certain correlation,….5 mm a−1 would be a realistic accuracy estimate’ does not provide a proper error estimate. In contrast, their larger RMS of ±15 mm a−1 is an indication of the systematic variation of dH surface/dt that is very similar to the systematic variations of the ICESat measured dh/dt over the entire Lake, which are also strongly influenced by drifting snow over surface undulations (our Fig. 5).

Although not randomly distributed, the shape of the distribution of dH/dt in their Fig. 3b appears to be near Gaussian with outliers in the tails and a small positive mean for the central part. We performed a convergent 3-sigma edit on the distribution that eliminated nine outliers in the bins at −50, −45, −40, and +50 mm, giving a mean of +2.5 mm a−1 and a median of +5 mm a−1, both of which suggest a small elevation increase with a RMS variability of ±15 mm a−1.

2. ‘Richter and others (Reference Richter 2014 ) discuss in detail, the fact that the ice sheet above Subglacial Lake Vostok is in hydrostatic equilibrium…….the local surface height change observed at a point…reflects primarily the mean ice-thickness change over the lake area. Spatial variations in the ice-thickness change are attenuated by a factor (ρ w − ρi)/ρw (with water density ρw and ice density ρi), thus propagating only 8% of the difference between the local and the mean ice-thickness change to the surface height. In the light of the hydrostatic balance, the significant spatial variation in height change rates across the lake area in Fig. 5 of Zwally and others (Reference Zwally, Li, Robbins, Saba, Yi and Brenner2015),…need(s) further explanation.’

Two definitive findings from the ICESat measurements as shown in Fig. 5 are: (1) a significant spatial variability of dh/dt over the Lake surface from <0 to >30 mm a–1; and (2) a strong similarity of the dh/dt over the Lake surface with the dh/dt over the surrounding grounded ice. There clearly is no systematic reduction in dh/dt at the transitions from the grounded ice to the ice over the Lake or in the central area, certainly not in a ratio of 8%.

We believe that our findings provide new information about the behavior of the ice over the Lake and the sub-glacial hydrology that calls for additional scientific investigation, and perhaps reevaluation of what is meant by floating ice and hydrostatic equilibrium as applied to Vostok Lake. It seems there is a fundamental difference between a lighter-than-water solid (e.g. an iceberg) floating in water of sufficient depth that the solid does not touch bottom, and ice ‘floating’ on a layer of water of lesser depth where the inflow and outflow is constrained. Another example of the latter would be a steel piston ‘floating’ in a lubricated cylinder above a smaller thickness of oil, which is also a situation of hydrostatic equilibrium with a balance of pressures at the steel/oil interface. If the flow of the underlying fluid is not constrained, then the fluid flows out (hydrodynamics) and the solid falls to the bottom, as in the numerous Antarctic subglacial lakes (e.g. Wingham and others, Reference Wingham, Siegert, Shepherd and Muir2006; Fricker and Scambos, Reference Fricker and Scambos2009) that are only hydrostatic when not in state of draining or filling. We also note that the ratio of our observed rates of height change (~20 mm a−1) to ice thickness are extremely small (i.e. <1/105 a−1) so that deviations from hydrostatic conditions or the rates of change in the subglacial water exchange could be very small and not be observable in features of the topological analysis in their referenced papers that concluded a state of hydrostatic equilibrium.

3. ‘Zwally and others (Reference Zwally, Li, Robbins, Saba, Yi and Brenner2015) misinterpret Fig. 4 of Richter and others (Reference Richter 2014 ) writing: ”Similarly, ΔHi (i.e. ΔH(ti) in Fig. 4 of Richter and others, Reference Richter 2014 ) mostly overlap rather than separate in time as they would if bias adjustments were applied.” This figure is intended to reveal surface deformations instead of height changes over time. Therefore, any effect of inter-campaign biases is eliminated beforehand….’

We meant that our equivalent ΔH(ti) plots using our bias adjustments do separate in time. Theirs do not separate, presumably because their bias adjustments were determined over the Lake assuming the surface elevation was not changing”.

4. ‘Richter and others (Reference Richter 2008 ) document the accumulation rates and snow densities observed in-situ around Vostok station. These are challenged….and…(their) statement “Richter and others (Reference Richter 2008 )…did not actually measure the rise of the snow surface in the vicinity of their GPS markers” is not true. …..Instrumental accumulation monitoring (e.g. in arrays of accumulation stakes) is usually too limited….to account rigorously for the spatial component of snow build-up variation. A pragmatic approach to reduce the noise introduced by this spatial variation is to increase the temporal integration interval. For this reason, and considering the significant 50 a period in temporal accumulation variation established in the Vostok station area (Ekaykin and others 2004), Richter and others (Reference Richter2008) preferred the 200 a mean accumulation rate over that derived from 25 a of stake measurements .’

Our analysis correctly stated that Richter and others (Reference Richter2008) estimated new snow growth at the GPS marker using a 200 a mean accumulation rate from an ice core and a snow density ‘of 0.33 g cm−3 as ‘the best estimate for the surface snow layer….from numerous snow pits and….accumulation stake farm’, and that they did not use contemporaneous new snow growth measured at the markers.

Our principal point was that estimates of new snow growth are very sensitive to the choice of accumulation rate, which has both significant spatial and temporal variability. ‘The density value of 0.33 g cm−3….was used to derive the accumulation rate of 22.9 ± 1.8 mm a−1 from the snow build-up observed in the Vostok stake farm in the period 1970–1995….and there is neither reason nor evidence given by Zwally and others (Reference Zwally, Li, Robbins, Saba, Yi and Brenner2015) for why a density of 0.30 g cm−3 is “a better value” for the Vostok station area.’ The relevant density needed to estimate the new snow growth above a GPS marker, along with accumulation rate A, is the density near the snow surface (ρns ). Our alternate value of 0.30 g cm−3 is from density measurements at Dome Fuji in EA (Takahashi and Kameda, Reference Takahashi and Kameda2007). Nevertheless, if Richter and others’ had actually used that ‘stake-farm’ accumulation rate of 22.9 mm a−1 (instead of the 20.6 mm a−1 from their 200 a mean) along with their density of 0.33 g cm−3, their estimate of the new snow growth would have been 69.4 mm a−1 instead of 62.4 mm a−1, and along with their GPS measurement of −62.1 mm a−1 their estimate of dH surface/dt would then have been 7.3 mm a−1 instead of their 0.3 ± 5.0 mm a−1. In either the case of dH surface/dt equal to +7.3 mm a−1 or our calculation of 14.2 mm a−1 using ρ ns equal to 0.30 g cm−3, our conclusions regarding the sensitivity of the snow growth to accumulation and their underestimate of the error in their dH surface/dt of 0.3 ± 5 mm a−1 remain valid.

We noted that larger ‘values of A in the range 24–30 mm a–1 are also supported by the 17 ka means along transects west of the lake derived from radar layering (Vieli and others, Reference Vieli, Siegert and Payne2004)’, which were calibrated by dating at the intersection with the Vostok ice core. An alternate A of 30 mm a–1 in the vicinity of Vostok station (also from the compilation of field data only by Giovinetto and Zwally, Reference Giovinetto and Zwally2000) gives dS ns/dt of 100 mm a–1 and dh gps/dt of +37.9 mm a–1 (or +28.8 mm a–1 using ρ ns = 0.30 g cm−3).

5.Zwally and others (Reference Zwally, Li, Robbins, Saba, Yi and Brenner2015) challenge the stability of the GPS markers presented by Richter and others (Reference Richter2014), describing them as “poles placed in the firn to some unspecified depths” and claiming: “An unspecified potential source of error is possible motion of their GPS markers within the firn”. Richter and others (Reference Richter2014) state: The markers consist of wooden stakes or aluminum tubes initially emplaced at least 50 cm deep in the snow.’

Incompressible poles in a compressing medium can have only one point of motion in common. As we noted ‘The measured V gps is intended to be the velocity of firn compaction plus the velocity of the ice beneath the firn.’ In the pioneering measurements by Ian Whillans and co-workers, exceptional care was taken to secure a well-defined anchor point in the firn (Hamilton and others, Reference Hamilton, Whillans and Morgan1998), because the velocity of firn compaction varies with depth in the firn as the density increases. Examples of measurements of the depth variation of the vertical strain rate in firn are described in Arthern and others (Reference Arthern, Vaughan, Rankin, Mulvaney and Thomas2010).

‘Finally, Richter and others (Reference Richter2014) presented vertical velocities of 56 GNSS markers distributed over the whole lake area…..The velocities range from −50 to −60 mm a−1 in the southern part of the lake up to −80 to −100 mm a−1 in the northern part…..this is a combined effect of a regional N/S accumulation gradient, proven independently by glaciological data, and the hydrostatic balance of the floating ice.’ It is neither clear what causes their large range of measured velocities at 56 markers, nor how that range of velocities is accounted for by accumulation variations over the Lake. It is also not clear what they assume causes the lowering of their markers as depicted in Fig. 2b of Richter and others (Reference Richter2014) for two reasons: (1) their figure only depicts the portion of the firn densification in the lower part of the pole above the pole base, and does not depict the downward velocity of firn compaction (i.e. V fc(z base)) at the pole base due to the greater densification occurring down to the depth of the firn/ice transition; and (2) their figure does not include the vertical component of ice flow (V ice) below the firn (cf. Fig. 2 in Zwally and Li, Reference Zwally and Li2002). Therefore assuming the pole is anchored at the base, their measured velocity should be V fc(z base) + V ice. For a comparison of the relative magnitudes of V fc(z) and V ice in the steady state, for example, V fc(z = 0) ≈ 2.1V ice at the surface and the total surface velocity is V(z = 0) ≈ 3.1V ice, where V ice = <A>/ρ i and <A> is the mean surface accumulation (Zwally and Li, Reference Zwally and Li2002). Considering the attention given to one measurement from Richter and others (Reference Richter2008), it would be interesting to see similar specific analysis for the other 56 markers and how their chosen accumulation rates for that large range of measured velocities might indicate a stable surface.

6.Based on…. the stability of the ice surface height above Vostok Subglacial Lake…. Richter and others (Reference Richter2014) derived relative ICESat intercampaign biases….’.

Intercampaign biases determined over a surface using an incorrect conclusion or assumption that the vertical motion of the surface is zero will include a trend in the biases equal to the vertical motion of the surface, which we believe is the case for the biases estimated over Vostok Lake.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We very much appreciate the insightful comments and suggestions of an anonymous reviewer, the numerous engineers and scientists dedicated to the success of the ICESat mission, and the continued support of NASA management.

References

REFERENCES

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