Introduction
Polycrystalline glacier ice near the melting temperature (∼0°C) contains μm-scale water inclusions at the three-grain junctions (Reference Nye and FrankNye and Frank, 1973; Reference MaderMader, 1992). This water significantly increases the strain rate of temperate glacier ice (Reference DuvalDuval, 1977), which has motivated numerous studies targeted at measuring microcrystalline water content in glaciers (e.g. Reference Vallon, Petit and FabreVallon and others, 1976; Reference YuYa, Moskalevsky and VasilenkoMacheret and others, 1993; Reference Murray, Stuart, Fry, Gamble and CrabtreeMurray and others, 2000; Reference Pettersson, Jansson and BlatterPettersson and others, 2004; Reference Bradford and HarperBradford and Harper, 2005; Reference Navarro, YuYa and BenjumeaNavarro and others, 2005; Reference Bradford, Nichols, Mikesell and HarperBradford and others, 2009; Reference Endres, Murray, Booth and WestEndres and others, 2009; Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others, 2010b).
Polythermal glaciers are composed of both cold and temperate ice, and represent a perfect experimental setting to investigate changes in microcrystalline water content. This is because the boundary between cold and temperate ice, the cold-temperate transition surface (CTS; Reference Hutter, Blatter and FunkHutter and others, 1988; Reference Pettersson, Jansson and HolmlundPettersson and others, 2003), is a prominent englacial feature. Across the CTS a jump in water content (from near-zero to single-digit percentages) and hardness (stiffer cold ice to softer temperate ice) is typically observed (Reference Aschwanden and BlatterAschwanden and Blatter, 2005; Reference Gusmeroli, Clark, Murray, Booth, Kulessa and BarrettGusmeroli and others, 2010a). Such an increase in water content on the temperate side of the CTS lowers the propagation speed of both radar and seismic waves. The speed of these signals can therefore theoretically be used to infer microcrystalline water content.
Temperate ice also contains air, mainly in the form of bubbles (Reference RaymondRaymond, 1976), and is more appropriately described as a three-phase medium containing solid polycrystals, liquid microcrystalline water and air in bubbles. Such a three-phase approach has recently been demonstrated to be particularly crucial in terms of water content estimates from radar speeds (Reference Bradford and HarperBradford and Harper, 2005; Reference Bradford, Nichols, Mikesell and HarperBradford and others, 2009; Reference Gusmeroli, Clark, Murray, Booth, Kulessa and BarrettGusmeroli and others, 2010a). When the air content of temperate ice is neglected (i.e. when only a two-phase ice/water model is used) water content estimates are typically overestimated (Reference Bradford and HarperBradford and Harper, 2005; Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Barrett, Clark and BoothGusmeroli and others, 2008). This sensitivity is, however, still unclear from a seismic perspective. Several studies (Reference Navarro, YuYa and BenjumeaNavarro and others, 2005; Reference Endres, Murray, Booth and WestEndres and others, 2009) have interpreted variation in seismic speeds as an indicator of water content using a two-phase (ice/water) approach; however, these studies have not addressed the effects of air content (responsible for bulk density; Reference Kohnen and BentleyKohnen and Bentley 1973) and ice temperature (Reference KohnenKohnen, 1974). Thus the effect of air content on seismic waves propagating in a three-phase mixture of ice, water and air remains to be investigated.
Here we investigate the vertical distribution of compressional-wave (P-wave) speeds using a three-phase framework, by forward modeling the effects that known air content, temperature and water content values have on seismic waves. We simulate the P-wave structure of a vertical section in the ablation area of the polythermal glacier Storglaciaren, Sweden (Fig. 1), using a high-resolution (1 m depth-step) density and water content profile measured from borehole radar (Reference Gusmeroli, Clark, Murray, Booth, Kulessa and BarrettGusmeroli and others, 2010a). We then compare the modeled speed structure with the results of a series of four orthogonally orientated walkaway vertical seismic profiles (VSPs) acquired in the same area in the summer of 2008.
Storgläciaren: Physical Properties of the Study Area
Storglaciaren (Fig. 1) is a small (3 km long), well-studied valley glacier located in the Kebnekaise massif, Sweden, just north of the Arctic Circle (e.g. Reference JanssonJansson, 1996; Reference Holmlund, Jansson and PetterssonHolmlund and others, 2005). Storglaciären is entirely temperate in the accumulation area, whereas it has a polythermal structure in the ablation area. The polythermal structure at our study site is composed of a cold, permanently frozen, surface layer overlying a temperate core (Reference Hooke, Gould and BrzozowskiHooke and others, 1983; Reference Holmlund and ErikssonHolmlund and Eriksson, 1989; Reference Pettersson, Jansson and HolmlundPettersson and others, 2003). The water content in the temperate ice on Storglaciären varies spatially (Reference Pettersson, Jansson and BlatterPettersson and others, 2004) but is generally small and homogeneous with depth, typically 0.6–1% (Reference Gusmeroli, Clark, Murray, Booth, Kulessa and BarrettGusmeroli and others, 2010a). Higher water contents (possibly up to 2%) are suspected for deeper, near-bed ice (Reference Aschwanden and BlatterAschwanden and Blatter, 2005, Reference Aschwanden and Blatter2009; Reference Gusmeroli, Clark, Murray, Booth, Kulessa and BarrettGusmeroli and others, 2010a); these higher values result from heat of deformation, which melts some ice and increases the water content.
Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others (2010b) studied the physical properties of a vertical section of the upper ablation area of the glacier (Fig. 1), and obtained vertical profiles of temperature, air content and water content for the upper 80 m of the ice column. A thorough description of the experiments conducted to obtain the englacial measurements is given by Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others (2010b); here we present a brief synopsis of the results.
The temperature profile, measured by thermistors installed within the ice, shows that the CTS is at 21 m depth at this location (Fig. 2a). Ice temperature at the surface is below the melting point and increases with depth. The air content (Fig. 2b) was measured using the near-surface (1m depth) radio-wave speed (Reference Gusmeroli, Clark, Murray, Booth, Kulessa and BarrettGusmeroli and others, 2010a). This shallow estimate gave an initial value which was subsequently modeled using a pressure/porosity model based on the theory of Reference Bradford, Nichols, Mikesell and HarperBradford and others (2009). The modeled air content profile (Fig. 2b) shows a decrease of density with depth due to air-bubble compression. Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others (2010b) used this air profile to correct the radio-wave speeds. These corrected speeds can be inverted for water content (Fig. 2c). The result shows that water content values measured from cross-borehole radar at Storglaciären are relatively homogeneous with depth in the upper part of the temperate ice, with a tendency towards higher values at greater depths. The mean water content measured within the ice column is 0:6 ± 0 :3%. In this study we simulate the slightly higher water contents at depth with a three-layer water content structure consisting of an upper layer (21-60 m depth) with 0.5% water content and a lower layer (61-85 m depth) with 0.6% water content. The three profiles in Figure 2 represent the starting point of our seismic forward modeling. Although the water content model here is a simplified version of that of Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others (2010b), it sufficiently describes its most important characteristic: a homogeneous layer with only a slight increase in water content at greater depths. These physical properties (Fig. 2) will be used to obtain the P-wave speed structure within the glacier.
Modeling the P-Wave Speed Structure
Propagation speed of compressional P-waves within glaciers depends on temperature, air content and water content. Cold temperatures, low air content and low water contents result in high seismic speeds. Based on in situ observations Reference KohnenKohnen (1974) derived the temperature dependence of P-wave speed as
where T is ice temperature (°C). v P(T) is often considered a reference value for cold, water-free ice. If glacier ice was not a multi-phase material, then v P(T) would be the speed structure within the subsurface. However, since temperate glacier ice can also be composed of air (Fig. 2b) and water (Fig. 2c), a three-phase medium should be considered. Reference Gusmeroli, Pettit, Kennedy and RitzGusmeroli and others (2012) reviewed suggestions for temperature correction published since Reference KohnenKohnen’s (1974) work, and concluded that they are all relatively similar. For example, Reference Helgerud, Waite, Kirby and NurHelgerud and others (2009) suggested a gradient of –2.7. The difference between Reference Helgerud, Waite, Kirby and NurHelgerud and others (2009) and Reference KohnenKohnen (1974) is almost negligible for the small temperature range used in this study and therefore the Reference KohnenKohnen (1974) relationship is considered adequate.
In polar ice sheets, P-wave speed increases with depth, mirroring the increase of density, p (Reference Kohnen and BentleyKohnen and Bentley, 1973). This behavior reflects the reduction of the relative proportion of air in the two-phase firn. A simple, well-established method to estimate the bulk speed in a multiphase medium is Wyllie’s time-average equation (Reference Wyllie, Gregory and GardnerWyllie and others, 1958). The bulk propagation speed in the medium will be proportional to the relative volumetric concentrations of the components. Thus, by defining vPa and v Pw as the P-wave speed in air (330 ms–1; Reference Sheriff and GeldartSheriff and Geldart, 1999) and water (1450 ms–1; Reference Sheriff and GeldartSheriff and Geldart, 1999), respectively, we can obtain v P(T, a, w), the bulk speed in the three-phase glacier ice,
where Φa and Φ w are volumetric air and water fractions, respectively. Both vPa and vPw may vary with depth in the borehole, due to temperature and pressure change (Reference MackenzieMackenzie, 1981; Reference Sheriff and GeldartSheriff and Geldart, 1999); however, these variations are ∼2ms–1, which is insignificant for our study. We thus assume constant v Pa and vPw. Equation (2) includes the strong dependence of seismic speeds on density (Reference Kohnen and BentleyKohnen and Bentley, 1973).
Vertical Seismic Profiling (Vsp)
Borehole VSP is an established technique in exploration seismology which allows quantification of subsurface seismic speed (Reference Sheriff and GeldartSheriff and Geldart, 1999). In typical geological applications heterogeneity in the stratified subsurface results in high P-wave speed contrasts, which allow differentiation of material properties. Speed contrasts in glaciological applications are smaller than in rock applications, so an additional aim of this study is to examine the usefulness of VSP experiments in alpine glaciers. In VSP a series of receivers, located in a borehole, record seismic energy generated at the surface at some variable distance from the borehole (Fig. 3).
Travel-time modeling of VSP
In a hypothetical VSP experiment the first prominent arrival is the direct wave, which propagates directly from the source to the in-hole receiver. If the source is located at some offset, x, from the borehole (Fig. 3), the path of the propagating direct wave is oblique; otherwise, when the source is at the position of the borehole and the borehole is straight, the path is vertical and in this case the VSP may be called zero-offset VSP (Reference Sheriff and GeldartSheriff and Geldart, 1999). In layered media the propagation of seismic waves obeys Snell’s law: ray paths refract at the interface between two different layers, according to the incidence angle and the magnitude of the speed contrast. Such behavior causes rays to bend at interfaces.
In common geological situations seismic speeds in the subsurface vary over a very large range (<300 to >2000m s–1; Reference Miller and XiaMiller and Xia, 1998; Reference Sheriff and GeldartSheriff and Geldart, 1999). Since speed contrasts are thus very high, and ray curvature is not negligible, a bent-ray approach is required to model VSP travel times (Reference Moret, Clement, Knoll and BarrashMoret and others, 2004). A bent-ray approach should also be applied in polar ice sheets or in the accumulation area of mountain glaciers, where the presence of a strong density gradient leads to P-wave speeds <1500ms–1 in snow, rising to ∼3000ms–1 in firn and reaching ∼3800 ms–1 in ice (e.g. Reference King and JarvisKing and Jarvis, 2007). Such a significant speed gradient is not present in the ablation area of glaciers, where snow and firn are absent. Consequently for the ablation area of Storglaciären we can model ray paths using the negligible-ray-bending assumption (Reference Schuster, Johnson and TrentmanSchuster and others, 1988) and ray paths can be modeled as straight.
The travel-time model is structured using the physical properties illustrated in Figure 2. An 85 m VSP is modeled with 1 m depth-step sampling of the direct wave (the first-arriving compressional wave that, following a near-straight ray path, propagates between the source and the receiver). In our model the shot position is located at distance x from the borehole top. Receivers are located at depths zi, where subscript i indicates the depth of the layer. By considering a VSP experiment of a simple two-layer case (Fig. 3) the travel times, t, of the direct wave recorded at positions z 1 and z 2 are given by
and
respectively. The path lengths, AE = EC, are easily found by trigonometrical relationships on the triangle ABC (Fig. 3).
The propagation angle, a, changes according to receiver depth. Thus for each z
Similarly, AE, the travel path in each layer, will diminish as a increases:
Thus the travel time of the received P-wave at depth z, tz , is simply given by the sum of the travel times in each layer of different speed, v(z):
where n is the total number of layers considered in the model.
Field experiment
We collected four orthogonally orientated walkaway VSPs in an 80m deep, water-filled borehole located in the upper ablation area of Storglaciären in summer 2008 (Fig. 1). The borehole was drilled using the Stockholm University hot-water drill (Reference Jansson Pand NäslundJansson and Näslund, 2009). A walkaway is simply obtained by moving the shot position progressively away from the borehole. Seismic energy was generated with a sledgehammer and received by a 12-channel, 1 m spacing, 10 Hz hydrophone string, which was lowered down the borehole to different depths. The borehole was entirely water-filled. The array was lowered down-hole so the travel times of the direct wave could be estimated at a 1 m depth spacing. The shot position was located using a tape measure. The area investigated by the VSP experiment was generally flat or had very little topography. A flat area was primarily chosen because it facilitated drilling operations. Some topography (up to ∼2 m height difference in 60 m distance) was, however, present in the along-flow direction. In other words, the shot located 30 m west of the borehole was ∼2 m higher than the shot located 30 m east of the borehole (Fig. 1). The effect of this topographic gradient in the along-flow direction is discussed below.
Sample data for a VSP with source located 3 m away from the borehole are shown in Figure 4. The collected seismic profiles are of good quality. They show clear P-wave direct arrival first breaks, and are rich in other arrivals (i.e. converted-wave direct arrivals; englacial and subglacial P-wave reflections; tube waves, a ubiquitous noise source in VSPs) that have varying dominant frequencies as revealed by bandpass filtering (Fig. 4). Here we use only the direct arrivals first breaks to compare seismic travel times with our a priori model. The other seismic signals observed in the VSP records and the full velocity inversion will be the subject of future investigations.
Results
Modeled P-wave speed structure in the ablation area
The modeled P-wave speed through the 80 m ice column imaged (Eqns (1) and (2)) varies by ∼100ms–1 (Fig. 5, asterisks). The lower speed (∼3700ms–1) is found in the upper part of the ice column, due to the presence of air within the cold ice. The transition from cold ice to temperate ice is marked by a ∼10 m s–1 decrease in speed (Fig. 5). The seismic CTS at Storglaciären is thus characterized by a 0.3% decrease in speed, ∼10 times lower than the decrease in speed observed at the radar CTS (Reference Gusmeroli, Clark, Murray, Booth, Kulessa and BarrettGusmeroli and others, 2010a). The air content and its decrease with depth dominates the overall modeled seismic speed structure (Figs 5 and 2b). The temperature-induced decrease of speed from the cold to the temperate side of the CTS is very small (5 m s–1; Fig. 5, curve T). In the bulk part of the ice column, speed gradually increases with depth, reaching the highest value of 3760 m s–1 at 80 m depth.
VSP travel times
The arrival times of the propagating P-wave at different receiver depths were obtained from four orthogonally orientated VSP lines (Fig. 1). In this way, potential azimuthal variation in P-wave speed (e.g. ice anisotropy) can be detected, since four different propagation directions were sampled (up-flow, down-flow and across-flow in two opposite directions). We varied the source-offset distance, x, in 5 m increments from 5 to 30 m, and collected six VSPs for each line. Here we only show the differences in modeled and measured travel time for a representative 30 m offset, since it sufficiently summarizes the main findings of our experiment.
Results from VSP arrival times for the four lines (Fig. 6 for a 30 m offset VSP) show that the modeled P-wave structure generally matches the field experiment. This is especially evident for the two transverse profiles (LINE1 and LINE3; Fig. 6) as the misfit between modeled and measured travel time for these two lines is within 0.2 ms (Fig. 6). This misfit is within the travel-time uncertainties for the P-wave direct arrival first picks, which is approximated as S t = 0:25 ms (twice our sampling rate of 0.125 ms). t can be approximated to twice the sampling rate, because the sampled first break might actually be arriving one or two samples earlier. The uncertainty in travel time causes speed uncertainties which vary with the travel path. Our resultant P-wave velocity uncertainty, v, is a function of the uncertainties in our observed travel time, t, and the ray-path length, d, for a given source-to-receiver arrangement,
and the error in speed varies inversely with distance travelled, d. v is very high (between ±400 and ±100ms–1 ) in the upper 10 m of the ice column, but it reduces to ±50 m s–1 in the bulk of the ice column. We can thus be confident that the measured travel times at depths >10m in the across-flow direction agree with the speed structure indicated by asterisks in Figure 5, within a margin of ±50 ms-1.
In the along-flow direction, the observed direct arrival travel times show a deviation of up to 1 ms from our speed model, the up-glacier travel times being consistently slower than the model predictions (LINE4; Figs 6 and 7). The misfit between our model and the seismic observations is indeed higher for these two profiles and well above the 0.25 uncertainty in our travel-time picks, with a deviation of up to ±1.0ms below 40 m receiver depth (Fig. 7). These results suggest apparent anisotropy in the flow direction; P-wave speed appears to be lower when propagating along-flow, whereas it is higher when propagating in the opposite direction. Apparent anisotropy is also confirmed by looking at the mean misfit measured in each survey (Fig. 7).
Discussion
For down-going direct-wave first arrivals, for zero- and near-offset VSP shots, we find that the travel times predicted by the model agree with field observations to within 0.2 ms, i.e. less than the observational uncertainties (Fig. 7). This is particularly true for the VSP surveys acquired perpendicular to the glacier flow, where we found negligible differences between modeled and measured P-wave arrival times. Potential along-flow seismic anisotropy was also observed because waves propagating down-glacier arrived ∼0.8–1.0 ms after those propagating up-glacier. In this section we discuss the two main issues that arose in this study: (1) the relationship between seismic speeds and physical properties in the ablation area of a polythermal glacier and (2) the presence of apparent along-flow seismic anisotropy.
Is the straight-ray approach safe and appropriate?
The ice of the ablation area is homogeneous, old metamorphic glacier ice, already densified. We are thus correct to assume an a priori absence of a significant density gradient that leads to an equally important velocity gradient. However, our choice of a straight-ray approach is simplistic and violates Snell’s law (Fig. 3). Figure 5 demonstrates that seismic velocities can vary by ∼-100ms–1 in the upper 20-30 m of the ice column; a potentially important velocity gradient thus exists and whether or not this impacts our analysis needs to be determined.
We thus undertook further analysis; based on the model observed in Figure 5, we compared modeled travel times following the straight-ray assumption and utilizing a framework that bends rays for each layer and does not violate Snell’s law. The results show that there is no practical difference between the two (Fig. 8) and that the straight-ray approach described above is applicable for the ablation area of a glacier where the near-surface speed gradient is minimal.
Seismic speeds and physical properties of glacier ice
Seismic speeds in temperate ice are important because they can be used to infer the microcrystalline water content and fabric, which are fundamental parameters in modeling ice viscosity. Reference Navarro, YuYa and BenjumeaNavarro and others (2005) and Reference Endres, Murray, Booth and WestEndres and others (2009) inferred water contents as high as 2% by inverting low seismic speed for water content in two-phase (ice/water) models. Our model and its agreement with the VSP travel times suggest that the P-wave speed in the cold surface layer is relatively low, ∼3700ms–1. This relatively low value is also supported by the speed analysis of the refraction surveys collected in the same area (Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others, 2010b). Reference GusmeroliGusmeroli (2010) provides further agreement, measuring an average P-wave speed of 3617 ±57 m s–1 in the uppermost ice. Here we suggest that this relatively low seismic speed is primarily caused by the air content of the ice. Such low seismic speeds have traditionally been interpreted as being typical of temperate ice with some volumetric percentages of microcrystalline water (Reference Benjumea, YuYa, Navarro and TeixidóBenjumea and others, 2003; Reference Endres, Murray, Booth and WestEndres and others, 2009). A simple (two-phase) interpretation of speeds as low as 3600 m s–1 could lead to the wrong conclusion that the upper 20 m of the ice column are composed of temperate ice with a volumetric water content of ∼3%. This value is calculated using Eqn (2) for a water/ice mixture. Other two-phase models, such as the Riznichencko model (Reference Benjumea, YuYa, Navarro and TeixidóBenjumea and others, 2003), do not differ significantly.
Instead seismic speeds measured and modeled in our study area suggest that relatively low P-wave speeds (e.g. 3600-3700 ms–1) are to be expected for cold ice in the ablation area. These low speeds are not due to the presence of water but, instead, to the presence of small percentages of air. As observed in polar ice masses, v P increases because of increasing pressure which decreases bubble size and air content. Although dominant, the magnitude of the air-content-induced change is, however, very small (only 100ms–1 between the lowest and the highest speed in Fig. 5). An even smaller, perhaps undetectable, change (only 10ms–1) is caused by the low water contents measured at Storglaciären. We believe that the change in vP due to water content might be hard to detect given the uncertainty often observed in many glaciological seismic speed estimates (tens of m s–1).
Equation (2) indirectly incorporates the densification with depth using air content. We thus consider the bulk density of the polycrystalline glacier ice to be primarily conditioned by the volumetric air content. Reference Kohnen and BentleyKohnen and Bentley (1973) pointed out that a universal density/speed function applicable to different glaciological settings might be difficult to obtain. Most of our knowledge of density/speed relationships comes from observations in polar firn (Reference Kohnen and BentleyKohnen and Bentley, 1973; Reference King and JarvisKing and Jarvis, 2007), where density changes up to 0.5 gcm- 3 lead to P-wave speed variations of ∼1500 m s–1 (Reference King and JarvisKing and Jarvis, 2007). In the ablation area of a mountain glacier (e.g. this study) there is no firn and the density gradient is significantly lower.
The necessity of including air content when inferring water content from radio-wave speed estimates appears to have been established in recent radioglaciological literature (Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Barrett, Clark and BoothGusmeroli and others, 2008, Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and Booth2010b; Reference Bradford, Nichols, Mikesell and HarperBradford and others, 2009). The reason is that the presence of air increases the bulk radio-wave speed and thus causes underestimation of water content. From a seismic perspective, this behavior is quite the opposite; the presence of air within the ice matrix decreases the bulk speed, meaning that water content can be overestimated if air content is ignored. The glaciological consequences of this are important; by ignoring the presence of air, bulk speeds in the water-free cold ice of the ablation area of Storglaciaren suggest water content up to 3%.
We stress that the P-wave structure modeled in this study is valid only for the ablation area of the glacier. In the accumulation area the presence of snow and firn might lead to speeds considerably lower than those reported in Figure 5. Additionally, we have very little knowledge about the water content of the ice in the accumulation area. Reference Schneider and JanssonSchneider and Jansson (2004) found values as high as 3% and these values are likely to be significant. Acquiring borehole geophysical data in the ablation area of glaciers is easier than working in the accumulation areas, where the occurrence of snow-covered crevasses and the presence of porous firn result in logistical challenges that must be overcome to improve our ability to use ground-based geophysics to detect ice properties.
Azimuthal variation in seismic results
Results from our VSP surveys (Figs 6 and 7) might suggest an up-/down-glacier oriented seismic anisotropy. P-waves propagating from west to east (down-flow) propagate more slowly than those waves propagating in the opposite direction (Fig. 6). This behavior is consistent with P-wave arrival times, which are higher than modeled in the down-glacier direction but are lower than modeled in the up-glacier direction (LINE2 and LINE4 in Figs 6 and 7). In this subsection we briefly evaluate whether or not intrinsic anisotropy is observable in our data. Seismic P-wave speed is strongly anisotropic in single-crystal ice (see Reference Gusmeroli, Pettit, Kennedy and RitzGusmeroli and others, 2012, for a recent review). When the wave propagates parallel to the c-axis it propagates ∼5% faster than when it propagates parallel to the basal plane (Reference BentleyBentley, 1972; Rothlisberger, 1972; Reference Blankenship and BentleyBlankenship and Bentley, 1987; Reference Anandakrishnan, Fitzpatrick, Alley, Gow and MeeseAnandakrishnan and others, 1994; Reference Gusmeroli, Pettit, Kennedy and RitzGusmeroli and others, 2012). In a polycrystalline aggregate of glacier ice this seismic anisotropy is possible when the majority of crystals are aligned along certain preferential directions. A response such as the one observed in our dataset (slower wave from up-glacier) can be explained by a fabric style which is not typically observed in glacier ice. Another factor that could potentially contribute to along-flow differences is variations in the percentage of water. A slower wave from up-glacier implies higher water content up-glacier from the center of the VSP experiment. Reference Pettersson, Jansson and BlatterPettersson and others (2004) found distinct patterns of water content at the CTS, with lower and higher water content on either side of the glacier center line. We thus may expect across-glacier rather than along-glacier variability. Additionally the horizontal and vertical variability documented by both Reference Pettersson, Jansson and BlatterPettersson and others (2004) and Reference Gusmeroli, Murray, Jansson, Pettersson, Aschwanden and BoothGusmeroli and others (2010b) still lies within (/>w<1%. For these reasons we do not believe that the observed azimuthal variation can be explained with different cj) w.
Inclinometry data from the borehole show very little deviation from the vertical. The maximum deviation is <1 m and the main deviation is towards the northeast. The upper 30 m of the borehole exhibits a deviation of <0.5 m; a maximum deviation of 1 m is observed at the base of the borehole (80 m depth), resulting in a 0.01 ms change in travel times from a truly vertical borehole. Deviation of ∼1 m has a negligible effect (∼0.01 ms) on the arrival times. We used differential GPS (dGPS) to measure differences in topography of ∼2 m for the greatest offset distance covered in our study (30 m). It thus follows that a receiver located at depth z is in reality located at depth z + 1 m for the wave propagating down-glacier and at depth z – 1 m for the wave propagating up-glacier. For z = 40 m we obtain travel-time differences of ∼0.5 ms between the two directions. Topography might thus explain most of the observed apparent travel-time anisotropy, because singular profiles (Fig. 6) and mean misfits are <1 ms (Fig. 7). It is therefore likely that the observed misfits are due to topography instead of real physical anisotropy.
Conclusions and Outlook
We have studied the seismic P-wave structure of the upper ablation area of Storglaciaren, and found that the seismic velocity structure of the ice is largely dominated by the presence of air. P-wave speed typically increases with depth from 3700 m s–1 at the surface to 3760 m s–1 at 80 m depth; this change is almost entirely explained by a reduction in air content from 3% at the surface to <0.5% at depth. Changes in P-wave speed due to water content are very small (∼10ms–1). The seismic CTS is characterized by a 0.3% decrease in speed, about ten times lower than the decrease in radar-wave speed observed for the radar CTS (Reference Gusmeroli, Clark, Murray, Booth, Kulessa and BarrettGusmeroli and others, 2010a). These results highlight the importance of including air content when inferring physical properties of temperate glacier ice; if air is neglected, a two-phase (ice/water) interpretation of relatively low P-wave speed in cold, water-free ice could lead to the conclusion that the ice was temperate with some volumetric percentage of water.
Our modeled arrival times match the observed arrival times to within 0.25 ms in the transverse direction, corresponding to a seismic speed uncertainty of 50ms–1. This uncertainty in constraining the seismic speed is high for detecting water content. Future studies should focus on reducing uncertainties in seismic speed determination as well as applying a joint inversion of radar-seismic datasets, as in Reference Endres, Murray, Booth and WestEndres and others (2009). We believe that future application of VSP to glaciological problems, perhaps combined with the use of explosives to increase the signal-to-noise ratio and increase sampling frequency, might enhance important advances in glacier geophysics. These advances include a detailed analysis of the shear waves collected here (as they are more sensitive to water than P-waves), and ongoing efforts to seismically infer englacial temperature (Reference Gusmeroli, Clark, Murray, Booth, Kulessa and BarrettGusmeroli and others, 2010a; Reference Peters, Anandakrishnan, Alley and VoigtPeters and others, 2012), model ice rheology and, ultimately, obtain reliable datasets that can be useful for modelers when predicting the future dynamics of mountain glaciers and ice sheets.
Acknowledgements
A.G. is supported by the Alaska Climate Science Center, funded by Cooperative Agreement No. G10AC00588 from the United States Geological Survey. The contents of this paper are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not represent the official views of USGS. Fieldwork was undertaken while A.G. was a postgraduate student at Swansea University, and was funded by the Jeremy Willson Charitable Trust, the Consorzio dei Comuni del Bacino Imbrifero Montano dell’Adda, the Percy Sladen Fund, the Mount Everest Foundation, the British Society for Geomorphology, the Quaternary Research Association, the Dudley Stamp Memorial Fund and the Earth and Space Foundation. A.G. thanks E.C. Pettit for support, discussions and comments on an earlier version of the manuscript. Partial financial support for P.J. was provided by Swedish Research Council grant 621-2007-3752B. B. Reinardy and D. Hjelm helped in the field. Logistics from the Tarfala Research Station were fundamental for this study. Queen’s University Belfast let us use its seismic system. R.S. Sturm provided assistance in revising the figures. Discussions with and help from A.D. Booth and B.E. Barrett are gratefully acknowledged. Careful reviews from H. Horgan and an anonymous reviewer improved the manuscript.