New Contribution to Ross Ice Shelf (Antarctica) Boundary Conditions:
Basement Depths and Sediment Thickness Determined from Aeromagnetic Data
Abstract
The Ross Ice Shelf (RIS) has long obscured the structure of the extended
crust of the southern Ross Embayment. Here, we use airborne magnetics
data from the ROSETTA-Ice project to estimate the depth to crystalline
basement and sediment thickness beneath the RIS. We estimate the depth
to the top of the magnetic crust, using a Werner deconvolution in a 2-D
moving window applied to aeromagnetic data at 10 km line spacing. The
result is then filtered, clustered, and gridded solutions to achieve a
continuous basement surface. This method was tuned with seismic acoustic
basement in the Ross Sea and magnetic basement determined from Operation
Ice Bridge flight line data over both the Ross Sea and the RIS. Sub-RIS
sediment thickness was then calculated relative to bathymetry. Shallow
basement and thin sediments beneath the RIS define two major basement
highs. A throughgoing, wide basement high is located midway across the
RIS, and appears to form a southward continuation of the Ross Sea’s
Central High. The other prominent basement feature underlies Roosevelt
Island, with a continuation SE to the grounding zone. An elongate basin
between the two highs deepens southward, reaching its greatest depth
beneath Siple Dome. A deep oval basin flanks Crary Ice Rise. Both basins
contain >2 km sediment. Bordering the Transantarctic
Mountains (TAM) there is a deeper and broader basement basin that
contains a narrow, linear, NW trending basement ridge. The magnetic
basement is shallower toward Marie Byrd Land and deeper near the
TAM/East Antarctica, consistent with contrasts in magnetic and gravity
signatures of the crust on either side of the mid-RIS high. The trend of
basement highs and basins parallel to the central TAM front suggests
that the basement relief ≥2 km is structurally controlled, and is a
product of regional extension. Basin sediments may be a source of
deformable subglacial bed conditions for grounded ice, and basin
flanking faults may control geothermal flux and subglacial water
transport. These considerations have a bearing on sub-RIS boundary
conditions that are important for cryosphere-ocean numerical modelling
frameworks. Our work extends the current knowledge of sub-RIS sediment
distribution, continental rifting orientations and the likely locations
of basin flanking faults.