Coastal and Landfast Sea Ice Thickness in Western Ross Sea, Antarctica, from Airborne Electromagnetic Induction in November 2017: Sea Ice in Front of Hells Gate Ice Shelf

The data are approximately 800 km of airborne electromagnetic survey of coastal sea ice and sub-ice platelet layer (SIPL) thickness distributions in the western Ross Sea, Antarctica, from McMurdo Sound to Cape Adare. Data were collected between 8 and 13 November 2017, within 30 days of the maximum fast ice extent in this region. Approximately 700 km of the transect was over landfast sea ice that had been mechanically attached to the coast for at least 15 days. Most of the ice was first-year sea ice. Unsmoothed in-phase and quadrature components are presented at all locations. Data have been smoothed with an 100 point median filter, and in-phase and quadrature smoothed data are also presented at all locations. Beneath level ice it is possible to identify the thickness of an SIPL and a filter is described (Langhorne et al) to identify level ice. Level ice in-phase, quadrature and SIPL thickness, derived from these, are presented at locations of level ice. For rough ice, the in-phase component is considered the best measure of sea ice thickness. For level ice where there is the possibility of an SIPL, then the quadrature component is considered the best measure of ice thickness, along with SIPL thickness. All data are in meters.

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Additional Info

Field Value
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Author
Maintainer
Maintainer Email pat.langhorne@otago.ac.nz
Source
Source Created 2022-11-09T10:43:00
Source Modified 2024-05-23T23:02:42
Language English
Spatial {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[163.7527, -74.9265], [163.8823, -74.9265], [163.8823, -74.8741], [163.7527, -74.8741], [163.7527, -74.9265]]]}
Source Identifier 742ab8fe-f0c3-4974-a0fa-81f6e8d49eb7
Dataset metadata created 25 March 2025, last updated 25 March 2025