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Letters to Nature

Nature 398, 323-326 (25 March 1999) | doi:10.1038/18653; Received 16 April 1998; Accepted 7 January 1999

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Distortion of isochronous layers in ice revealed by ground-penetrating radar

David G. Vaughan1, Hugh F. J. Corr1, Christopher S. M. Doake1 & Ed. D. Waddington2

  1. British Antarctic Survey, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0ET, UK
  2. Geophysics Program, University of Washington, Box 351650, Seattle, USA

Correspondence to: Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to D.G.V. (e-mail: Email: d.vaughan@bas.ac.uk).

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In addition to measuring ice-sheet thickness, ground-penetrating radar can be used to delineate reflections in ice sheets1, 2, 3. These reflections are generally accepted to result from layers of isochronous deposition of snow and can reveal much about the dynamics of the ice flow. Here we present ground-penetrating radar data from Fletcher Promontory, Antarctica, which show arches and troughs in isochronous ice layers to a depth of 100 m. We demonstrate that the origin of these features can be determined by their growth with depth, and many features result from local anomalies in accumulation rate which can be correlated with the ice surface slope. One arch appears to be the result of a local anomaly in vertical strain-rate. Its proximity to the ice divide, width, and growth with depth, indicate that this arch is one of a class of features postulated by Raymond4 but not previously shown to exist in the field. Such a feature is an indication of the nonlinear rheology of ice and requires that palaeoclimate records from ice cores extracted from the vicinity of ice divides underlain by similar features should be specifically corrected for such effects on ice-flow.