retrieval from ATM data (Abdalati and Krabill, 1999), which
holds promise for highly detailed studies of individual glaciers.
The method for velocity determination relies on the tracking of
distinguishable elevation features over time. Because the
scanner, unlike a profiler, measures over a swath rather than
along a single line, many features can be identified
unambiguously in a single-survey, and again, somewhere
downstream in a second survey. This requires that the terrain
be of sufficient topographic variability (about one meter rms
roughness), and the surface topographic characteristics are
sufficiently preserved in the time period that separates the
surveys. Moreover, if the repeat survey time separation is on
the order of a few days, motion must be sufficiently rapid that
measurement errors are small when compared to the motion
signal. Largely crevassed, fast-moving glaciers, such as those
found in some of the Greenland ice sheet drainage basins, are
well-suited for such purposes.
In order to make comparisons between two sets of scanning
surveys, the data must first be interpolated onto a consistent
grid. We choose a 1 meter grid (roughly the size of a single
laser shot) and perform an inverse distance weighting
interpolation of the data within 7 meters of the grid point. 7
meters is chosen because for a normally operating scanner on
an aircraft flying at 150 m/s, it represents one half of the largest
linear gap in the data that should occur. Once the data from the
pair of surveys are interpolated onto a consistent grid, their
elevation features are compared to one another to determine the
offset between features. This comparison is done using the
method and software of Scambos et al., (1992). In the earlier
of the two “images”, a small sub-sample region, ranging from
16 to 128 pixels (meters in our case) on a side, is identified,
and its nearest match in the second image, within a pre-defined
search area, is found. The offset is determined and is then
converted to a velocity by dividing the distance by the time
elapsed between surveys.
Figure 2 shows an example of a segment of a pair of 1997
surveys in the Jakobshavn Isbrae (Location A in Figure 3) that
are separated by six days (May 13th — May 19th). Distinct
elevation features, crevasses in particular, are clearly visible in
both elevation images with an easily detectable offset between
the first and second. Superimposed on the image are arrows
showing the magnitude of the offset between the two, and the
corresponding velocity scale.
Some of the flight lines over the faster parts of the Jakobshavn
area were repeated (twice) for velocity measurements again in
1998, along with two regions on the east coast (Figure 3).
Coincident with the altimetry measurements were thickness
measurements made with the University of Kansas ice-
penetrating radar (Chuah, et aL, 1996). In the cases where
velocities and ice thicknesses can be successfully retrieved
across a glacier, flux estimates can be made. Such estimates
require sufficient swath width (in relation to flow rate) so that
features can be matched across the width of the swath in the
survey pairs. Retrieval of thickneses in steep-walled glaciers,
however is particularly challenging because of clutter in the
radar imagery due to reflections off the bedrock walls (S.
Gogineni, personal communication). In the case of the
Jakobshavn ice stream, thickness retrieval is further
complicated by the extreme depth of the channel and the
temperate character of the ice.
May 13, 1997
H Tr
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ss E
Gh 7
zZ ]
2 r À
2n
i MOL. 5
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Q L 14
z r N
ob, i 4 1 i L i L j
0 200 400 600 800
East-West Distance (m)
May 19, 1997
200
S
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North-South Distance (m)
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=
200 400 600 800
East-West Distance (m)
Figure 2. Interpolated elevation data from ATM measurements
over a small section the Jakobshavn Ice Stream (location A in
Fig. 3). Elevations range from a low of 88 m (blue) to a high
of 113 m (red), and offsets of the features is apparent between
the two images. The arrows represent the displacement over
the intervening six days. Reprinted with some modification
from Remote Sensing of Environment, Vol. 67, Calculation of
ice velocities in Jakobshavn Isbrae area using airborne laser
altimetry, W. Abdalati, and W.B. Krabill pp. 194-204
Copyright (1999) with permission from Elsevier Science.
eo proies
The 1998 flight trajectories are shown in Figure 3 along with
the regions for which ATM-derived velocities were studied.
The figure shows the Jakobshavn region in the west, where
repeat surveys were made in 1997 and 1998, as well as two
areas in the east, Kangerdlugssuaq Glacier, and the ice margin
at 65°N.
4.2 Results and Discussion
Velocity vectors for the areas of survey pairs are shown in
Figure 3, and the vectors are overlaid on ERS Synthetic
Aperture Radar imagery (© European Space Agency,
Copyright 1992). In the vicinity of the Jakobshavn Isbrae, the
flow character is very clear in the flow vectors. The boundaries
between the ice streams and the more stagnant ice are easily
distinguished by the changes in direction and magnitude of the
Internationé
flow vectors. The ma
nearly 7 km per year.
Similar views are give
Glacier and the ice mai
transects yield the best
is because the region
these flights were flow
1998 AIM
Figure 3. Maps of 1998
in Case A, the Jakobsh
imagery is from the Dig
Ice Data Center a he U
Copyright 1992), by M
Calculation of ice velo
Copyright (1999) with I