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December
11, 2006
MOULIN
'BLANC': NASA EXPEDITION PROBES
DEEP WITHIN A GREENLAND GLACIER
Research scientist Dr. Alberto Behar
of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory took in the "show" at the moulin this summer.
But unlike Paris'
famous Moulin Rouge, this moulin had no singers or colorful dancers
adorned in
feathers, rhinestones and sequins. Rather, the star of this moulin was
Mother
Nature herself, presenting a dazzling display of moving water and ice.
A moulin is a narrow, tubular shaft in
a glacier that
provides a pathway for water to travel from the glacier's surface to
its
bottom. Behar and co-investigator Dr. Konrad Steffen of the University of Colorado,
Boulder,
led an
expedition to send a JPL-built probe down into these glacial chutes in
the
remote and isolated Pakisoq region of the West Greenland Ice Sheet.
That
dynamic area of Earth's northern polar region is not well understood
and is
responding rapidly to climate change. Previous NASA measurements there
using
global positioning system data show the ice there moves an average of
about 20
centimeters (8 inches) a day, accelerating to about 35 centimeters (14
inches)
a day during the summer melt. The scientists set out to see if these
moulins,
or pathways, within and beneath these mountains of ice can shed new
light on
how glacial water flows from the ice sheet to the sea.
"How water is distributed within a glacier and the rate at which it
permeates through to a glacier's bottom affects the glacier's ability
to store
water, its pressure, and the speed at which a glacier moves," said
Behar.
"Scientists have long known that ponds of melted ice on the surfaces of
glaciers and the moulins they create allow glaciers to flow faster. Our
study
-- the first of its kind in this region -- we hope will provide a
better
understanding of the factors at work here."
In glaciological terms, moulins (French for "mill") are essentially
vertical "rivers" that serve as a glacier's internal plumbing system,
carrying water out of the glacier from melt water lakes on the surface.
They
can be hundreds of meters deep and up to 10 meters (33 feet) wide. The
melt
water lakes are typically found in the undulations of the ice sheet all
around Greenland
between 500 and 1,500 meters (1,640 to 4,920
feet) above sea level. Occasionally, the lower end of a moulin may be
exposed
in the face of a glacier.
In Greenland,
the surface
of the ice sheet moves at varying speeds, on both seasonal and
shorter-term
time scales. Seasonally, glacial water penetrates to the glacier bed
through
significant thicknesses of cold ice. Occasionally, however, there are
periods
when water flows rapidly into glacial drainage systems. For example,
early in
the melt season, new drainage connections are established between
glacial surfaces
and their beds, resulting in sudden new flows of water out of the
glaciers. In
the middle of the melt season, surface melting resumes after periods of
cold
weather, which can partially close sub-glacial channels.
The moulin probe Behar and his fellow scientists used evolved from a
proven
design tested extensively in the lab and the field during three
Antarctic field
research investigations. Then known as the Antarctic Ice Borehole
Probe, it
studied ice streams in West Antarctica, the Amery ice shelf in East
Antarctica
and the Rutford ice stream in West
Antarctica.
The current version of the probe retains the ruggedness of the previous
version
but is modified specifically to explore the moulin environment. It
consists of
two high-resolution charge-coupled device cameras (a side-viewing
digital
camera and a downward-viewing video camera), lights, associated
electronics and
an inclinometer that measures the tilt of the moulin chute. Images are
sent in
real time through a tether one kilometer long (about 3,300 feet) to a
receiving
station at the surface. The station has a video display, computer and
digital
tape recording devices.
Working in bitter cold, slushy, windy conditions (minus 10 degrees
Celsius, or
14 degrees Fahrenheit), the scientists deployed the probe in two
locations of
the moulin. Once the probe descended to 110 meters (361 feet), it
encountered
horizontally flowing water and debris about one to two meters (3.3 to
6.6 feet)
deep. In this particular moulin, the water flows out in well-developed
channels
to the edge of the ice sheet. At the time of the experiment, the
scientists
measured the water flow rate of the surface melt rivers feeding the
moulin at
approximately 15 cubic meters a second (about 238,000 gallons a
minute).
Video data from the probe revealed enormous ice caverns formed by the
moulin
deep beneath the glacial surface. This particular moulin appears to
fill up
with snow, which hardens during the winter. When the surface melts in
the
summer, this ice forms snow bridges.
Behar believes the probe reached the
bottom of the moulin.
Next year, University of Colorado
scientists
will use ground-penetrating radar to accurately measure the glacial ice
thickness at this location. These data will help scientists better
interpret
their findings and plan future tests. The probe's design will be
reevaluated
this fall and modified, if necessary, in preparation for future tests.
"This was an exciting, important first look into a place that's not
well
understood but could have an important role in understanding the
dynamics of
this region," said Behar. "We're excited by the possibilities this
technology holds, not only for future studies of Earth's icy regions,
but also
for future missions to explore extreme ice and liquid environments on
other planets,
such as the Martian polar ice caps and Jupiter's moon Europa."
Detailed results of the investigation will be presented at the December
meeting
of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.
The research was funded by NASA and the
National Science Foundation.
For
more information and images, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/moulin-20061211.html
##
Contact:
Alan Buis
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
818-354-0474
alan.d.buis@jpl.nasa.gov
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/moulin-20061211.html
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