JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2020

Presentation information

[E] Poster

A (Atmospheric and Hydrospheric Sciences ) » A-CC Cryospheric Sciences & Cold District Environment

[A-CC38] Ice cores and paleoenvironmental modeling

convener:Ayako Abe-Ouchi(Atmosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo), Ryu Uemura(Nagoya University), Kenji Kawamura(National Institute of Polar Research, Research Organization of Information and Systems), Nozomu Takeuchi(Chiba University)

[ACC38-P03] Evolution in geometry of firn in ice sheets detected by dielectric
anisotropy

*Shuji Fujita1,2, Kotaro FUKUI3, Mikihiro Hirabayashi1, Iizuka Yoshinori4, Sumito Matoba4, Atsushi Miyamoto5, Takeshi Saito4, Hideaki Motoyama1,2, Toshitaka Suzuki6 (1.National Institute of Polar Research, Research Organization of Information and Systems(ROIS), 2.SOKENDAI, Japan, 3.Tateyama Caldera Sabo Museum, Japan, 4.ILTS, Hokkaido Univ., Japan, 5.Hokkaido Univ., Japan, 6.Yamagata Univ., Japan)

Keywords:ice core, firn, metamorphism

Ice in polar ice sheets once experience a state of firn at near-surface depths. Therefore, it is important to understand physical processes of firn formation, metamorphism and deformation for ice core studies. We investigated firn through measurement of tensorial values of the dielectric permittivity at microwave and millimeter-wave frequencies. This method can detect presence and strength of anisotropic structure in the geometry of pore spaces and ice matrix. We applied the method to many firn cores drilled at both ice sheets. We find that firn that have shorter residence time at the near-surface depths does not form strong vertical anisotropy that is caused by vertical movement of moistures. In contrast, firn that have longer residence time at the near-surface depths tend to form vertical anisotropy. When density exceeds more than ~600 kg/m3, a common feature of firn at many polar sites is that there is evolution of vertically elongated features of pore spaces in firn despite growth of vertical compression. We hypothesize an explanation as follows. As firn becomes denser, air within firn escape to upward directions as compared to sinking firn. In firn, porous structure tends to have vertically elongated structure because of this vertical escape movement of air. The observed phenomena of the growth of the vertical dielectric anisotropy can be understood by this vertical movement of the air within firn.