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James & Ivins 1995
James, T.S. and Ivins, E.R. (1995). Present-day Antarctic ice mass changes and crustal motion. Geophysical Research Letters 22: doi: 10.1029/94GL02800. issn: 0094-8276.

The peak vertical velocities predicted by three realistic, but contrasting, present-day scenarios of Antarctic ice sheet mass balance are found to be of the order of several mm/a. One scenario predicts local uplift rates in excess of 5 mm/a. These rates are small compared to the peak Antarctic vertical velocities of the ICE-3G glacial rebound model, which are in excess of 20 mm/a. If the Holocene Antarctic deglaciation history portrayed in ICE-3G is realistic, and if regional upper mantle viscosity is not an order of magnitude below 1021 Pa-s, then a vast geographical region in West Antarctica is uplifting at a rate that could be detected by a future Global Positioning System (GPS) campaign. While present-day scenarios predict small vertical crustal velocities, their overall continent-ocean mass exchange is large enough to account for substantial portion of the observed secular polar motion (&OHgr;m↘) and time-varying zonal gravity field J˙l. Âż American Geophysical Union 1995

BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

Keywords
Geodesy and Gravity, Crustal movements—intraplate, Hydrology, Glaciology, Geodesy and Gravity, Ocean/Earth/atmosphere interactions, Exploration Geophysics, Oceanic structures
Journal
Geophysical Research Letters
http://www.agu.org/journals/gl/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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