Abstract
Two types of experiments were performed near Upstream B Camp on Ice Stream B2 using a high-resolution ground-penetrating radar system. In the first type of experiment, tracking a metal drill tip through the upper 85 m of the ice column indicated an approximately linear decrease of wave speed with depth down to 50 m, with a constant speed of 170 ± 4 m µs−1 below. We believe the (unexpected) linearity may have been caused by one or more buried crevasses. In the second experiment, a survey of a 250 km2 grid showed a population of buried crevasses at about 30 m depth that have an estimated burial age of 210 ± 25 years, which is taken to indicate that this ice has been exhibiting streaming behavior for at least that length of time. One 3 km segment along the edge of the survey area nearest the center of the stream showed virtually flat, undisrupted stratigraphy down to the maximum depth of our measurements. The fact that this ice was accelerated from near-zero speed to its present 440 m a−1 without cracking or folding suggests that this ice may have been incorporated into the ice stream as a solid block.

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