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Mitrovica & Milne 1998
Mitrovica, J.X. and Milne, G.A. (1998). Glaciation-induced perturbations in the Earth’s rotation: A new appraisal. Journal of Geophysical Research 103: doi: 10.1029/97JB02121. issn: 0148-0227.

We revisit the theory and predictions of glaciation-induced perturbations in both the rotation rate of the Earth (or 2) and the wander of the rotation pole with respect to the surface geography. The two most common theoretical formulations associated with polar wander driven by the surface loading of a viscoelastic Earth Sabadini et al., 1982; Wu and Peltier, 1984> appear to disagree (by one) on the number of rotational normal modes associated with a surface gravitational response having N normal modes. We show, using a generalized theory, that the two formalisms yield essentially equivalent predictions. We next consider a benchmark comparison of recent predictions of present-day polar wander speed due to glacial isostatic adjustment (henceforth GIA). These comparisons confirm the validity of certain previous analyses Spada et al., 1992a>. They also reveal that predictions of polar wander speed can be sensitive to an assumption of incompressibility. Previous studies have noted that predictions of 2/rotation rate, as a function of lower mantle viscosity, differ significantly in form from analogous predictions of polar wander speed. We investigate these differences by considering the contribution to the predicted anomalies from the individual normal modes of relaxation. We find that the normal mode structure of the 2/rotation rate predictions is fundamentally different from that which characterizes the polar wander response, and this difference reflects the distinct physical mechanisms which govern these anomalies. Finally, using a large suite of forward computations, as well as the calculation of a set of Frechet kernels, we investigate the sensitivity of our predictions to variations in the viscoelastic Earth model. We find, for example, that a previously noted sensitivity of polar wander speed predictions to variations in lithospheric thickness is only valid for Earth models with relatively weak lower mantle viscosities (<5¿1021 Pa s). ¿ 1998 American Geophysical Union

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Abstract

Keywords
Tectonophysics, Dynamics of lithosphere and mantle—general, Geodesy and Gravity, Rotational variations, Tectonophysics, Rheology—mantle, Tectonophysics, Earth's interior—composition and state
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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