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    Strategies for applying active seismic subglacial till characterization methods to valley glaciers

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    Author
    Zechman, Jenna M.
    Chair
    Truffer, Martin
    Larsen, Christopher F.
    Committee
    Coakley, Bernard J.
    Amundson, Jason M.
    Keyword
    Glaciers
    Alaska
    Taku Glacier
    Dynamics
    Amplitude variation with offset analysis
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/11122/7654
    Abstract
    Subglacial materials play an important role in glacier dynamics. High pore-pressure, high porosity (dilatant) tills can contribute to high basal motion rates by deforming. Amplitude Variation with Angle (AVA) analysis of seismic reflection data uses the relationship between basal reflectivity and reflection incidence angle to characterize the subglacial material. This technique can distinguish between dilatant tills and less-porous, non-deforming (dewatered) tills due to their distinctive reflectivity curves. However, noise from crevasses and glacier geometry effects can complicate reflectivity calculations, which require a source amplitude derived from the bed reflection multiple. We use a forward model to produce synthetic seismic records, including datasets with and without visible bed reflection multiples. The synthetic data are used to test source amplitude inversion and crossing angle analysis, which are amplitude analysis techniques that do not require absolute reflectivity calculations. We and that these alternative methods can distinguish subglacial till types, as long as reflections from crevasses do not obscure the bed reflection. The forward model can be used as a planning tool for seismic surveys on glaciers, as it can predict AVA success or failure based on crevasse geometries from remote sensing data and glacier bed geometry from radar or from a worst-case-scenario assumption of glacier bed shape. Applying lessons from the forward model, we perform AVA on a seismic dataset collected from Taku Glacier in Southeast Alaska in March 2016. Taku Glacier is a valley glacier thought to overlay thick sediment deposits. It has been the subject of numerous studies focusing on its ice-sediment interactions. Our analysis indicates that Taku Glacier overlies unconsolidated tills with porosity values greater than 33 %, though because of uncertainties due to the lack of a bed reflection multiple, it is possible that the tills are not dilatant.
    Description
    Thesis (M.S.) University of Alaska Fairbanks, 2017
    Date
    2017-05
    Type
    Thesis
    Collections
    College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics
    Theses (Geosciences)

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