Call number:
ZSP-201-81/19
In:
CRREL Report, 81-19
Description / Table of Contents:
Field observations support the interpretation that differences in the strength of radar returns from the ice covers of lakes on the North Slope of Alaska can be used to determine where the lake is frozen completely to the bottom. An ice/frozen soil interface is indicated by a weak return and an ice/ water interface by a strong return. The immediate value of this result is that SLAR (side-looking airborne radar) imagery can now be used to prepare maps of large areas of the North Slope showing where the lakes are shallower or deeper than 1.7m (the approximate draft of the lake ice at the time of the SLAR flights). The bathymetry of these shallow lakes is largely unknown and is not obvious from their sizes or outlines. Such information could be very useful, for example in finding suitable year-round water supplies.
Type of Medium:
Series available for loan
Pages:
iii, 17 Seiten
,
Illustrationen
Series Statement:
CRREL Report 81-19
URL:
https://hdl.handle.net/11681/9424
Language:
English
Note:
CONTENTS
Abstract
Preface
Introduction
The experiment
Results
Maps of completely frozen North Slope lakes
Literature cited
Location:
AWI Archive
Branch Library:
AWI Library
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