Radar Soundings on the Penny Ice Cap, Baffin Island
Open Access
- 1 January 1970
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Glaciology
- Vol. 9 (55) , 49-54
- https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022143000026782
Abstract
The first successful radar echo soundings through glacier ice in Canada were carried out by the Dominion Observatory in 1965 on an outlet glacier of the Penny Ice Cap in Baffin Island. An unmodified 440 MHz SCR-718 radar altimeter was used, of the type that is readily and inexpensively available on the surplus market. The radar soundings were generally in agreement, within the range of the reading accuracy of the oscilloscope (± 15 m), with depths obtained seismically, gravimetrically, and by the electrical resistivity method. The minimum and maximum recorded depths were 45 m and 550 m, respectively. The pip positions on the standard oscilloscope were recorded visually. This recording method was not satisfactory, but for future use the instrument could easily be modified to incorporate a larger oscilloscope with continuous photographic recording. Use of the relatively high carrier frequency of 440 MHz (compared with the more customary frequency of about 35 MHz) allows the use of smaller antennas and results in better resolution of the bedrock surface.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- INTERNATIONAL EXPERIMENTS IN GLACIER SOUNDING, 1963 AND 1964Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 1966
- Dielectric Properties of Ice and Snow–a ReviewJournal of Glaciology, 1965
- Ice Core Studies of Ward Hunt Ice Shelf, 1960Journal of Glaciology, 1964